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Whether right or wrong, however, the poet clearly indicates the necessity to eliminate ambiguity or half-heartedness on stating ‘And sorry I could not travel both.’ ‘And be one traveler, long I stood’ marks a position that suggests freedom of thought in which the traveler can opt to liberate either inspiration or unpleasant sentiments at wondering how it would be like having each road to cover, given equally opportune possibilities. At this stage, Frost hints at certain wonders where one road allows the person in journey to delight in psychologically concretizing every form of goodness, perhaps in acquiring material desires for real, on perceiving truth form out of noble ambitions, or with remarkable pleasures that actual love and comfortable living could hold out.
The other road ‘less traveled’, on the contrary, characterizes the exact opposites as it depicts sufferings or hardships which humans would most often prefer to get rid of. Because it was ‘grassy’ and ‘wanted wear’ likely points to the attribute of such road with passers in rare count to none which justifies the personification in the road’s plea of wanting to wear as it would probably not as long as it is less opted for. ‘Grassy’, equivalently, gives indication to the plainness of this road that it appears somewhat dull or lifeless to those who would rather seek to tread upon paths of exquisite colors.
This is to further allude that the environmental and corporal aspects of the road make great significance for they determine the vivid elements or factors that affect the basic nature of man who normally understands, yearns, and judges based on instincts. Frost then leads the critic to observe that a natural man, despite moral reasons, is quite inseparable from his senses when deciding whether or not to stay with earthly matters. Analysis of the Poem’s Rationale and Associated Irony While ‘I took the one less traveled by’ has become famous for the principle of making a typical righteous decision, at depth, the poet is discovered to render his creation under some degree of irony.
Since he necessitates having to look ‘down one as far as I could’ in the first stanza, ‘Then took the other, as just as fair’
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