Analysis Of Robert Frost's Mending Wall

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The setting in "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost is crucial to the theme that it is human tendency to build barriers in some form whether they are emotional or physical ones. Frost 's description of the wall separating the two properties as well gives us a clear idea of the differences in the neighbors. The way Frost formed his poem by not using a rhyme scheme, no stanzas, a very specific amount of lines and syllables paints a picture of the wall. The author heavily focuses on the perspective of the narrator to further highlight the idea that boundaries aren 't necessarily a bad thing if we question the purpose of our walls that we put up.
When you picture the setting of the place described in Frost 's poem you can almost see two very large properties …show more content…

The author does this to create suspense and gives us the idea that something could happen at any time. A good example of this is how the poem is made up of 46 lines and the line in the center is "There where it is we do not need the wall" (23) showing us the true feelings of the speaker. Frost continues to keep us engaged by having many of the lines made up of 10 syllables occasionally having a line with 11 syllables to throw us off our rhythm and keep us involved. The structure of this poem is very interesting and paints the biggest picture yet, when you follow the edge of the poem it creates the wall, showing us how it looks every year before they get together and repair …show more content…

We know that the speaker doesn 't fully believe in repairing this wall every year because he doesn 't understand why his neighbor insists on having the wall. Part of this is because the speaker knows the destruction of this wall is inevitable and it 's unfair that he must constantly rebuild it even though he doesn 't fully believe in it. The speaker goes on to say "Before I built a wall I 'd ask to know what I was walling in or walling out" (32-33) suggesting that he believes the wall is very unnecessary but at the same time trying to get his neighbor to express his feelings about the wall. The neighbor then replies with "Good fences make good neighbors" further solidifying the thought that he firmly believes in boundaries and has no interest in lower his internal walls that he has built up in his mind. As much as the speaker despises the wall he comes back year after year because he craves dialogue and social interactions. Frost uses personification when he says "My apple trees will never get across and eat the cones under his pines" (25-26) comparing the speaker to the apple trees to suggest that if they took down the wall the neighbor wouldn 't get bothered by him. But as these two walk along the wall while it almost just becomes a game with no deeper purpose and they rebuild it in

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