“The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost is the most widely misread poem in all of poetry.

Most people think the point of the poem is that you should take the road less travelled, march to beat of your own drummer, etc.

This is a misreading.

First of all, we are repeatedly told that the two roads looked basically the same.

Some lines:

“Then took the other, as just as fair"

"Though as for that the passing there

Had worn them really about the same,"

"And both that morning equally lay"

20 line poem, about 25% of them devoted to sameness of the paths.

It matters that he took one and not the other only because choices beget choices (and, importantly, foreclose others) and this is life.

We then tend to ascribe meaning and narrative retrospectively to those choices.

The traveler laments that he can’t take both paths, have all the experiences, NOT foreclose certain choices by making others:

“And sorry I could not travel both

And be one traveler”

“I shall be telling this with a sigh

Somewhere ages and ages hence,” the traveler tells us. And when he does, he will ascribe meaning to his choices. He will say he took the one less travelled (even though they were the same) and it really DID make all the difference, as he says, because by making that choice he definitionally could not make the other.

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That's his fault. He wasn't clear enough.

I kid. I was talking with someone about "the death of the author" just now so that concept was fresh on my mind.

We need more Barthes discussions on Nostr

Well said. We share this interpretation.