Lucy Scholes’s column about forgotten booksīut this isn’t just any poem. Robert’s Frost’s Writers at Work interview Looking for something else to read? How about … For an audience of car buyers in New Zealand to recognize a hundred-year-old poem from a country eight thousand miles away is something else entirely. For any mass audience to recognize any poem is (to put it mildly) unusual. In the commercial, this fact is never announced the audience is expected to recognize the poem unaided. It is, of course, “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost. Here is what is read by a voice-over artist, in the distinctive vowels of New Zealand, as the young man ponders his choice: But there is one very unusual aspect to this commercial. And it is, in most respects, a normal piece of smartly assembled and quietly manipulative product promotion. The advertisement I’ve just described ran in New Zealand in 2008. As the car pulls away and the screen is lit with gold-for it’s a commercial we’ve been watching-the emblem of the Ford Motor Company briefly appears. The man smiles slightly, as if confident in the life he’s chosen and happy to lend that confidence to a fellow traveler. As a car slows to pick him up, we realize the driver is the original man from the crossroads, only now he’s accompanied by a lovely woman and a child. The series resolves at last into a view of a different young man, with his thumb out on the side of a road. As he hesitates, images from possible futures flicker past: the young man wading into the ocean, hitchhiking, riding a bus, kissing a beautiful woman, working, laughing, eating, running, weeping. He pauses, his hands in his pockets, and looks back and forth between his options. So make sure that when you read this poem, you take your own road, whether it's the road less traveled or not.From The Road Not Taken: Finding America in the Poem Everyone Loves and Almost Everyone Gets Wrong, a new book by David Orr.Ī young man hiking through a forest is abruptly confronted with a fork in the path. And while it's easy to fall into that well-beaten path of analysis, it's not exactly accurate. A lot of people think this poem is encouraging us to take the road that's less traveled. Is that the best choice, or should we be non-conformists and take the less-traveled route? Years into the future, after making our decision, how will we feel about the path we've chosen? Robert Frost's "The Road Not Taken" is about these quandaries, present in every person's life. One of the big questions we face is whether or not to take the well-beaten, typical path. And for every metaphorical road we take in life, there is a road not taken – the club we didn't join, the class we didn't take, the words we didn't say. Just like trying to pick a path when we're driving or walking, we've all had to choose from different paths in life: which job to take, which college to go to, which girl or boy to ask to homecoming – the list of life's choices is endless. We might pick the road that gets us where we want to go, or one that takes us somewhere new, but either way, the road we choose takes us to where we are. But if we're beyond the reach of satellites, we just make a choice, unaided by technology. Of course, today, we can whip out a GPS or cell phone and figure out which is the correct path. Most people have been faced with a fork in an actual road or path, and not been sure which path to go down. It's more than a call to go your own way it's a reflection on life's hard choices and unknowns. Read closely, this poem is more than popular culture has made it out to be. Actually, the poem's ambiguity improves it. In fact, sometimes it flat out contradicts itself.īut the possibility that the poem has multiple meanings doesn't mean that it's not worthy of its popularity. While "The Road Not Taken" is often read as a resounding nonconformist's credo, the poem isn't so sure about its message. What you might not know is that this poem may not be as simple and uplifting as it seems. We could go on and on about how famous this poem is, but, since it is famous, you probably already know that. First published in Frost's collection Mountain Interval in 1916, almost a century later "The Road Not Taken" is still quoted left and right by inspirational speakers, writers, commercials, and everyday people. Along with Frost's poem " Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening," it's probably one of the most taught poems in American schools. Even if you haven't yet read "The Road Not Taken," it will probably have a familiar ring when you do – it's one of the most popular poems by one of the most famous American writers of the twentieth century, Robert Frost.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |