Sometimes, too much of something can be too much. If someone is eager to do something, they do it all of the time and it gets old. If someone loves something, they let it go. If it comes back, it is meant to be. That can go for many things. Too much of anything can be too much. By using imagry, Robert Frost conveys something coming to end, and someone being exhausted.
Sometimes, someone’s surroundings tell them that there is a certain kind of mood in the air and they tend to follow that mood. When a person is around something and it gives off a sad vibe, the person will tend to be sad. Like Frost said, “I cannot rub the strangeness from my sight/ I got from looking through a pane of glass/ I skimmed this morning from the drinking trough.” The season is coming to an end. It is getting cold and there is frozen water. Someone is sad that this is coming to an end. At the same time, another feeling is being conveyed.
When someone does something for so long, they will get tired of it. Someone can only do something for so long before they get bored and tired. Frost said, “For I have had too much/ of apple picking: I am over tired/ of the great harvest I myself desired./ there were ten thousand fruit to touch/ cherish in hand, lift down, and not let fall.” A reader can tell that Frost is tired of what he is doing. He has had too much and he is over tired, but he once desired that great harvest. Is too much of a good thing too much?
By using imagery, Frost conveys something coming to an end, and someone being exhausted. Even though someone might love an activity with all of their heart, if they do it all of the time, they will probably get bored, exhausted and overall done with that activity because they did it all of the time. Sometimes, too much of a good mechanism is too much.
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