mending wall
Robert Frost was inspired to write Mending Wall after talking with one of his farming friend Napoleon Guay. He learned from talking with his neighbor that writing in the tones of real life is an important factor in his poetic form (Liu,Tam). Henry David Thoreau once stated that, "A true account of the actual is the purest poetry." Another factor that might have played a role in inspiring Frost to write this poem was his experience of living on a farm as a small boy. Mending Wall was published in 1915 along with a collection of Frost's poems in North of Boston.Nature dissolves the barriers that humanity erects. The purpose of the wall in this poem was to isolate one's personality and privacy. In line one and thirty-five, "Something there is that doesn't love a wall" reveals that nature has no boundaries, and because it, "doesn't love the wall," nature attempts destroy that boundary to bring humanity and the environment together in a harmonious bond. Nature has made, "... gaps even two can pass abreast," shows how nature has made a hole big enough for one person to walk across, and towards another person's property to talk. But, it also shows how humans are still
He uses the words, "why," "where," "for whom," and "what" to ask the questions that are bothering him. What we also see is the old man holding onto his last shred of tradition he learned from his father and not letting it go without a fight. It went stressed-unstressed for 5 meters. In order to change, one must first break tradition. like an old-savage armed," with this quote, we see that the old man is being compared to an old, primitive being who cannot accept change. The two men we are introduced to are complete opposites; one is a young man who represents youth, and the other an older man who is traditional. Imagery The reader can vividly imagine the two neighbors working simitanously, side by side, and without saying a word to one another. The youth feels that mending the wall is only repairing the wall physically but not the wall between them emotionally, he feels they are loafing there time there, or wasting, and shouldn't bother with the wall at all. The first meaning is the physical one, a barrier between the youth and the older man, the second the relationship the youth and the older man make as they're mending the wall. ", which represents the dividing point of the poem, a barrier of sorts. These lines demonstrate how the neighbors "mend their wall, but they actually grow apart. Instead he accepts this to an extent and is still contemplating ways to how he can, "If I could put a notion in his head. Apples come and go with the seasons, but pines are forever and never out of season.
Common topics in this essay:
Repetition Repetition,
Napoleon Guy,
Statements Nature,
Tone Narrative,
Language Vocabulary,
Alliteration Frost,
Carson Gibbs,
Wise Resignation,
Argumentative Throughout,
David Thoreau,
mending wall,
fences neighbors,
doesn't love wall,
love wall,
doesn't love,
pass abreast,
wall nature,
poem written,
gaps pass,
poem contained,
throughout poem,
gaps pass abreast,
old-stone savage armed,
fences neighbors youth,
wall nature wall,
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