Robert Frost has written a poem called the “Mending Wall” to portray a physical and emotional meaning. When someone mentions a wall, people think about a physical barrier separating one thing from another. Robert Frost does mention a physical barrier between one person to another but also an emotional connection between the one person to another. He mentions the physical barrier as something that helps build the relationship. The poem “Mending Wall” by Robert Frost utilizes a physical and emotional meaning in use of diction and figurative language. Robert Frost uses diction to show comparison between physical and emotional meaning to the wall he references. Acknowledging different word choices expresses the physical barrier or the emotional barrier. Frost notifies, “ Something there is that doesn't love a wall,” (Frost 1). There …show more content…
The figurative language lets the reader put it in their own perspective on what the author is trying to convey. One quote that stands out, “ Good fences make good neighbors,” (Frost 2). This quote has two perspectives of both physical and emotional. In present day, neighbors use fences has a symbol of privacy and separation between each other. The fence acts as a physical barrier. That is a physical matter. Fences builds relationships from neighbors. If a fence becomes broken, neighbors work together to repair it. This causes bonding between one and another. Eventually the good fence that is repaired will bring the two neighbors together. Another quote that ties into the one above, “ But at spring mending-time we find them there, “ (Frost 1). During spring time, the two neighbors repair the wall which in fact could be the fence. This quote has two perspectives also. It could be the two neighbors physically repairing the wall during the spring. It could also be emotional by building the relationship between the two during the spring
In “Mending Wall”, two neighbors are ironically united by the traditional rebuilding of the wall between them. A wall symbolizes boundaries, orders, and separation. Or does it? One of the two neighbors doesn’t seem to think so. “Good fences make good neighbors” is his motto. (Line 26) The neighbor doesn’t see how ironic it is that the wall is a meeting spot. He uses the wall as an excuse to talk with his neighbor, because he is not very open or conversational. The situational irony ostended by Robert Frost is that the wall between the two clashing neighbors is supposed to separate them. However, each year, when they meet to “walk the line”, the wall serves as a meeting spot for the two to catch up. (Line 12) Dividing, but unifying, Frost uses the wall to symbolize unity amongst clashing people. Without the situational irony of repairing the wall, the two incompatible neighbors would unlikely be able to unite.
Intro: Tear down the walls! Ronald Reagan's "Tear Down This Wall" and Robert Frost's "Mending Wall" both talk about how walls separate people from each other, but they talk about different walls and different ideas. Those walls create a physical, as well as a mental barrier for the narrator and neighbor in Robert Frost's "Mending Walls" and Ronald Reagan's "Tear Down This Wall" that hinders the characters from relating to each other in a certain way. Although the style and tone of these two authors are very similar, they are speaking of two different things. Ronald Reagan and Robert Frost share many points in their papers.
"A world without walls is the only sustainable world..." Bill Clinton's statement about walls relates to both Frost's "Mending Wall" and Reagan's "Tear down This Wall". In each of these texts, nobody wants the wall up because it causes both physical and emotional unstableness for families and friends. In Reagan's speech it shows that they can't get supplies they need, they are cut off from the rest of the world, and kept away from family. In Frost's text it shows that people remain lonely because they can't see friends, and they can't form new friendships because the wall prevents new friendships from happening, also only the neighbor wants the wall so it causes emotional conflict. So as anyone can tell, the walls only cause problems both physically and emotionally for everyone.
Can a cow be anything more than a cow, or a wall actually be something other than a wall? Robert Frost, who lived from 1874 to 1963 and was considered one of America’s most eminent poets, demonstrated metaphors frequently within his poems. Readers of Frost’s poetry are often faced with the question, “What is Robert Frost really trying to say?” It is without a shadow of doubt that the American poet had the capability of taking his poetry and turning it into something preternatural, but not without the help of metaphors. Frost elaborated the meaning of metaphor as, “Saying one thing and meaning another, saying one thing in terms of another….” Several pieces of his work provides images such as a cow, a flower, country roads, and a wall that serve as metaphors for larger ideas.
In his poem 'Mending Wall', Robert Frost presents to us the thoughts of barriers linking people, communication, friendship and the sense of security people gain from barriers. His messages are conveyed using poetic techniques such as imagery, structure and humor, revealing a complex side of the poem as well as achieving an overall light-hearted effect. Robert Frost has cleverly intertwined both a literal and metaphoric meaning into the poem, using the mending of a tangible wall as a symbolic representation of the barriers that separate the neighbors in their friendship.
He also uses other devices such as a pun, applied in the line, "And to whom I was like to give offence." The last word of the line simply emphasizes the importance of the subject, the fence. The most prominent figure of speech, however, is the ironic, "Good fences make good neighbors." This is completely opposite of the connotation of the poem. Fences do not make neighbors, but strangers that are apathetic towards each other. The neighbor seems to prefer this approach, to eliminate any risks of trespassing or offenses. Yet what the fence really does is hinder the development of friendship. This is comparable to the barriers of bitterness, anger, hate, and fear men put between one another that obstruct love and friendship.
Walls are physical and emotional impediments that separate nature, people, and societies. Robert Frost’s poem “Mending Wall” and Ronald Reagan’s speech “Tear Down This Wall” are perfect examples of how unnatural and unnecessary walls are. They go into detail of how both nature and people despise walls. Walls create separation, and they also effect people, countries, and civilizations. Walls create a symbol of separation.
Robert Frost's "The Mending Wall" is a comment on the nature of our society. In this poem, Frost examines the way in which we interact with one another and how we function as a whole. For Frost, the world is often one of isolation. Man has difficulty communicating and relating to one another. As a result, we have a tendency to shut ourselves off from others. In the absence of effective communication, we play the foolish game of avoiding any meaningful contact with others in order to gain privacy.
“Mending Wall” by Robert Frost, the fifty-six line lyric poem gives off a sarcastic tone that expresses impatience with his neighbor and the “wall.” The poem focuses on a theme of separation, the necessity of boundaries and the illusory arguments used to annihilate them.
He writes, “Before I built a wall I’d ask to know / What I was walling in or walling out [...] Good fences make good neighbors” (32; 45). The neighbor’s ironic use of the phrase “Good fences make good neighbors” illustrates that he insists that his beliefs are correct and without question. His lack of societal evolution indicates ironic unnaturality through syntax and word
In the poem, “The Mending Wall” Frost creates a lot of ambiguity in order to leave the poem open for interpretation. Frost’s description of every detail in this poem is very interesting, it leaves the reader to decide for themselves what deductions they are to be making of the poem. To begin with, Frost makes literal implications about what the two men are doing. For instance, they are physically putting the stones back, one by one. Their commitment and constant drive shows how persistent these men seem about keeping the wall intact. On the other hand, there are inferences that something deeper is occurring.
In Roberts, Mending Wall, he expresses the alienation within our society. This story was and is very controversial throughout history. Written in 1914, it became widely known for its connection with racism and segregation. In 1960, Frost was asked to read it for President John F. Kennedy’s inauguration. In JFK’s inauguration speech, he declared, “We observe today not a victory of party, but a celebration of freedom”(Kennedy), which shows how he felt about segregation. This created a skirmish throughout the U.S., because this poem was so controversial. The poem, which was a memory when Frost was a young boy, consists of him walking the line. Walking the line means picking up rocks that had falling from the ice melting, recreating the fence between you and your neighbor. Frost suggests alienation in this story by using symbolism of the lines between African Americans and white folk. In the poem he asks the question, “Why do they make good neighbors”(line 30)? An interpretation of this line is that he is asking the question, ‘why do we have these lines between our people? There is no reasons to have these lines separating us?’. The poem suggests that we get into routines and then never break them because we have done them for generations. Frost challenges this, asking questions that are very hard to answer.
Frost used a distinct way of writing throughout his poem that not only hooked the reader into the story, but also made them question their own views of walls, both physical and psychological. In the poem it is displayed that walls can be both good and bad. The wall that the narrator sees as the embodiment of what separates them, it is actually the one thing that brings them together every spring. Near the end, the narrator brings back the original question, what is the something? With this poem, maybe Frost wanted the reader to examine themselves and their surroundings and try to answer the question of tradition, and how they unite us and separates us at the same time. The narrator’s neighbor is the personification of the old ways and custom in the poem, it is evident as he is constantly repeating “good fences make good neighbors” (Frost 245) and the fact that “he will not go behind his father’s saying” (Frost 246). Even though, good fences make good neighbors is a well-known proverb, people will eventually ask themselves: Why is it necessary to have fences to build good
However, when the responders’ delves deeper into the poem, it is clear that at a allegorical level the wall is a metaphor representing the barrier that exists in the neighbours’ friendship. The first eleven lines of the poem if rife with imagery that describes the dilapidation of the wall. The first line of the poem emphasises that “something” exists that “doesn’t love a wall”. This personification makes the “something” seem human-like. The use of words such as “spills” and “makes gaps” convey an image of animate actions and create a vivid impression of the degradation of the wall. Nature, presented in the form of cold weather, frost and the activities of creatures, also seeks to destroy the wall. The idea that walls are unnatural and therefore nature abhors walls is portrayed in the phrase “makes gaps even two can pass abreast”, which metaphorically indicates that nature desires for man to walk side by side with no barrier between them. When the two meet to fix the wall, it is a metaphor that could be interpreted as the two repairing their friendship as “To each the boulders have fallen to each” which shows that faults in their relationship lie on behalf of them both. While they are mending the wall, a light-hearted tone is established. This is shown through the inclusion of the metaphor “spring is mischief in me” which shows the neighbours having fun together in repairing the wall,