The attribute that contributes to Frost being an amazing poet is that Frost uses regionalism to express universal problems and the moral messages that interconnect with these problems. Frost also connects the hardships that (((he))) has faced in (((his))) own life with (((his))) poems. “…He endured personal tragedy: a son committed suicide, and a daughter had a complete mental collapse,” (BOOK CITATION). When Frost incorporates (((his))) own life experiences into (((his))) poems, this allows the readers to not only catch a glimpse of Frost’s life, creating a better bond between author and reader, but it also allows the reader to become more interested and emotionally attached to the …show more content…
Some options might be good choice and other options might be bad choices. This relates well with the two roads that the poet was faced with and had to decide on which one to take, the good road or the bad road. Often people want to cheat their way out of doing things by making up shortcuts. Robert Frost expresses this with making the character chose between two roads. The first road could have been an easy shortcut to get to a destination, but it might have presented bad things along the way that could have been a danger to the poet, while on the other hand the second road might have been a longer route to get to the same destination, but it could have presented no harm to the character along the