The Road Not Taken Review - Har Tuv
The Road Not Taken - LOTS Questions Stanza 1:Circle the correct answer (choose only one option).1) Where is the traveler as he starts telling his story? In the forest, facing a fork in the road. In the forest, at the end of a long road. In the forest, starting a trip with a friend. 2) What prevents the traveler from seeing farther down the road? The trees block his sight. He doesn't want to see the road up ahead. The road bends into dense vegetation. 3) What regret does the traveler express in the first stanza of the poem? He regrets the road he chose. He regrets not taking the other road. He regrets not being able to take both roads. Stanza 2: Decide if the following sentences are True or False and sort them into the table below. True The word "that" in line 9 refers to the well-trodden road. The roads are the same in that they are both well worn. At first, the traveler thinks that one road is more often chosen by people. The traveler realizes that the roads are not that different. The traveler chooses the road that he thinks most people don't take. False The two roads are completely different. The traveler is sure that one road is more popular than the other. At the end of stanza 2, the traveler still believes the roads are not similar at all. At the beginning of stanza 2, the traveler still can't choose which road to take. The two roads are the same in that they are both frightening. Stanza 3:Fill in the blanks using one or more words. 1) On that fall morning, the two roads equally lay which means that they both looked the same to the traveler.2) As the two roads "equally lay" before the traveler, he decided to stay on the road that he initially chose for one more day.3) As the traveler takes one of the roads, he realizes that he can never go back to that first fork in the road. Stanza 4:Match the quote from the poem to its meaning. Two roads diverged in a wood A fork in the road, which splits into 2 paths Somewhere ages and ages hence In the far, unknown future I shall be telling this with a sigh I will tell my children, grandchildren and friends about this meaningful journey I took the one less traveled by I decided to walk down a less popular path And that had made all the difference My choice determined my future The whole poem:The sentences below explain the poem in less poetic language. Match the sentences to the appropriate stanza in the poem.1) The traveler has reached a crossroads in a forest. stanza 1 stanza 2 stanza 3 stanza 4 2) The traveler regrets or feels comforted by his choice. stanza 1 stanza 2 stanza 3 stanza 4 3) The traveler's choice of road directly impacted his life path. stanza 1 stanza 2 stanza 3 stanza 4 4) The two roads were, in fact, more similar than different (2 stanzas). stanza 1 stanza 2 stanza 3 stanza 4 5) The road he did not take seemed to have been used by more travelers. stanza 1 stanza 2 stanza 3 stanza 4 6) However hard he tried to look down the road, the vegetation of the forest prevented him from seeing where it led. stanza 1 stanza 2 stanza 3 stanza 4 7) In life, one event or choice leads to another and it's unlikely we can go back to where we started. stanza 1 stanza 2 stanza 3 stanza 4