In the “Mending Wall” by Robert Frost, the speaker agrees to rebuild the wall every time it falls down, out of a sense of motivation, driven by tradition, and a desire to maintain a relationship with his neighbor. Frost’s illustration of the shared experience and interaction between the two neighbors solidifies the opinion that the speaker’s actions are influenced by their need to bond with the neighbor while also continuing the custom of mending the wall.
The speaker initiates the meeting each year to repair the wall as supported by the text, “I let my neighbor know… And on a day we meet ” (Frost 220). This clearly indicates that the speaker is the one who reaches out to the neighbor. However, this coming together to, “set the wall . . . once again” is not a one time event, but rather an annual tradition. This point is further proven when Frost writes, “at spring mending-time we find them there” (Frost 220) which shows that each spring they meet to repair the wall. The custom of mending the fence annually has been
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The speaker stated, “We wear our fingers rough with handling them,” (Frost 220) which demonstrated that the neighbors worked together to repair the wall. In addition to working together the two also had fun as supported by the speaker’s statement that this joint venture was,” “just another kind of outdoor game” (Frost 220). As in most relationships there is a sharing of opinions and ideas and that also occurs between the two neighbors. For example, the speaker uses this opportunity to question the neighbor’s belief that, “Good fences make good neighbors” (Frost 220) by mischievously challenging the neighbor and asking, “Why do they make good neighbors?” (Frost 220). Bonding through work, play and the sharing of ideas while mending the wall allows the speaker and neighbor to maintain their
, ‘My apples will never get across and eat the cones under his pines, and I tell him. He only says, good fences make good neighbours.’ This shows that there is clearly no substantial reason for the wall to be built but one neighbour carries the view that ‘good neighbours make good fences’ and no
families, or ethnicities. Robert Frost wrote of fences in his poem ―Mending Wall‖ showing how
The poem “A Fence” by Carl Sandburg talks about how metaphorical defenses or ”fences” can keep unfavorable elements from your life, such as “vagabonds and hungry men”, but also favorable elements such as “wondering children”. One example of metaphorical fences is being wary of people, it can keep the unsound type of people out of one’s life, but it may also cause building friendships a bit more difficult. The poem mentions how complex some fences can be and how it can hurt others that may try to go through them. Everybody has a fence, some are high, some are short. However, they can never keep three things out: “Death and the Rain and To-morrow.”
In the play , the fence functions as a physical, emotional and a societal barrier. There is a physical fence
"Neighbor" is here a metaphor for two people who are emotionally close to each other. "Good fences make good neighbors", is a line the author emphasizes by using it two times. The "neighbor" says the line while the main character does not agree with it. He can not see that there is something between them they need to be "walling in or walling out".
this reflects that nature itself does not like separation. The "something" refers to the intangible sense of social interaction. Furthermore "that sends the frozen-ground-swell under it" refers to Frost or to the author. Although the narrator does not want the wall, ironically, the mending of the wall brings the neighbors together and literally builds their friendship. An additional irony of the poem is that the only time these two neighbors see each other is when they both mend the wall.
“Mending Wall” is about two neighbors who disagree over the need of a wall to separate their properties. Not only does the wall act as a divider in separating estates, it also acts as a barrier in the neighbors' friendship, separating them. For the neighbor with the “pine trees” (line 24), the wall is of great significance, as it provides a sense of security and privacy. He believes that although two people can still be friendly neighbors, some form of barrier is needed to separate them and “wall in” the personal space and privacy of the individual. This is shown through his repeated saying, “good fences make good neighbors” (line 27-45). The neighbor’s property is a representation of his privacy and the wall acts as a barrier against intrusion.
The play “Fences” was based off of a family who all built a different type of fence. Their fences were based off of their character, which was very different. Everyone has their own personal fence or wall that they have to block people out or so they won’t get hurt for any reason. Some people build fences to keep people out, while other build fences to keep people in. In the play Rose wanted her husband Tory and his son Corey to build a fence around the yard to keep people out.
The conflict in "Mending Wall" develops as the speaker reveals more and more of himself while portraying a native Yankee and responding to the regional spirit he embodies. The opposition between observer and observed--and the tension produced by the observer's awareness of the difference--is crucial to the poem. Ultimately, the very knowledge of this opposition becomes itself a kind of barrier behind which the persona, for all his dislike of walls, finds himself confined.
The theme of the poem is about two neighbours who disagree over the need of a wall to separate their properties. Not only does the wall act as a divider in separating estates, it also acts as a barrier in the neighbours' friendship, separating them. For the neighbour with the pine trees, the wall is of great significance, as it provides a sense of security and privacy. He believes that although two people can still be friendly neighbours, some form of barrier is needed to separate them and 'wall in' the personal space and privacy of the individual. This is shown through his repeated saying, 'good fences make good neighbours' (line 27). The neighbour's property is a representation of his privacy and the wall acts as a barrier against intrusion.
The wall was probably built with practicality in mind, yet Frost highlights the ambiguous perception it may create in someone who is being “walled out.” Many people are known to “build walls instead of bridges” and this is what can ruin many relationships. When a person is more inviting and social, they would be more inclined to “build bridges,” but people who are enclosed and private tend to “build walls.” It is often difficult for the person on the other end to interpret the intent of the “builder,” complicating the interaction. The “Mending Wall,” suggests a generally good relationship between the speaker/narrator and his neighbor.
Frost begins the poem by relating the damage that has been inflicted upon the wall. The stunning image of the force "that sends the frozen-ground-swell under it and spills the upper boulders in the sun, and makes gaps even two can pass abreast" shows us that something natural, beautiful, and perhaps divine is taking place (2-4). From the very beginning he suggests that living without the wall is something positive. As the poem continues, we are introduced to two farmers engaged in the annual task of making repairs to the stone wall which separates their properties. In lines 14-17, Frost gives us the description of the neighbors meeting to walk the line, each picking up and r...
The poem “Mending Wall” begins by the narrator telling is that there is a wall that is constantly being taken down by nature, and the narrator and his neighbor have to keep re-building it. But as the poem progresses, the narrator becomes unsure with himself, and begins to say that there is a wall “There where it is we do not need the wall” (23). He starts to question why a wall is there, knowing that he can never get across it to his neighbor. As the poem keeps progressing, he learns that the wall is there because of his neighbors tradition from his father, and he ends up saying “Something there is that doesn’t love a wall that wants it down (35), and he is talking about himself. In the progression of this poem, we see the narrator’s character change from someone who is persistent to someone who has hatred for what he is doing. He becomes more aware, having an epiphany, learning that there is truly no need for a wall, and it is only there because his neighbor is following his father’s tradition that requires him to keep the wall up. Through this characterization, we see that by only one side having hatred for the other, it can cause a division between them, because one person disagrees with the other. Through this poem, we see many character changes amongst the narrator, but one character that stays the same
When a wall is encountered literally and physically, there are many different ways in which a person can react to the situation. One group of people would generally just find a way over or around the obstacle. While some other people might pursue a way directly through the wall. Both have their advantages and disadvantages, but they both exist as outcomes to the same dilemma. The basic wall has been around with humans for as long as the discovery of masonry has been around. Robert Frost’s poem Mending Wall is one such example of how a wall can have conflicting properties of human interaction. The neighbor in the poem says that “fences make good neighbors” and that the two neighbors involved with the wall rebuild it each spring and they enjoy fixing the wall with each other. The poem just helps illustrate that walls are an important factor in human activities. Walls are not limited to any specific culture or region and still they continue to be built over time.
Walls comes in different elements from stone to the human mind. In Robert Frost’s poem “Mending Wall”, he wrote “Before I built a wall I’d ask to know what I was walling in or walling out, and to whom I was like to give offense.” A person, before he puts up a wall, needs to know exactly who and what they are trying to wall in or out. For generations, walls were used to protect, as well as keep out those affected by the wall. People used emotional walls to keep feelings from others, but in the 20th century science and psychology, came into play and people started noticing the reasons behind this figurative wall that they were creating. I have had many occurrences in my life that I had to build that invisible