Well, here's something, but its far from an argumentative analysis essay:
Mending Wall is one of the poems that I'm studying in IB this year. The poem starts out with the ambiguous "Something there is that doesn't love a wall". Frost ponders why there's something in him, perhaps in all humans that doesn't like walls. Yet the irony is that he contacted his neighbor "I let my neighbor know beyond the hill" to fix the wall. Frost is the one that instigates this fixing of the wall. He also mocks his neighbor a bit, repeating "good fences make good neighbors", as if the man is very stubborn and determined to fix the fence. Also, Frost's neighbor seems to be ignorant or simplistic, perhaps even primitive. The neighbor is described to be "like an old-stone savage". Yet, at the very end of the poem, Frost seems to come to the realization that fences, though he may not like them, are necessary because they give people a sense of security. The end of the poem is much darker than the rest of the poem, and Frost seems to see that there may be a part of his neighbor that he, too, would like to keep away from him, as shown by,
"In each hand, like an old-stone savage armed.
He moves in darkness as it seems to me,
Not of woods only and the shade of trees.
It seems that his neighbor can appear dangerous as well, and Frost ends with his neighbor's statement, "Good fences make good neighbors". In short, the fence is what physically keeps the two neighbors apart, but also brings them together each spring to mend it once again.
In "Mending Wall," Frost examines the human impulse to build barriers that separate us from others, both physically and emotionally. The poem raises questions about the necessity of such walls and challenges the idea that they inherently promote peace and harmony between people. Frost suggests that while it's important to have boundaries, we should also be willing to challenge and reassess their purpose and significance in our lives.
It is about frost and his neighbour,every spring they meet to discuss on how to mend the wall that is being broken yet frost does not like the idea of having a wall.He asks himself what im i walling in or walling out,and when he suggests to his neighbour that they do not really need a wall,his neighbour just says good fences make good neighbours. EDIT: The main concept is to examine those walls that we put up in the past. This can extend to racial segregation, emotional barriers, etc. Why do we hold on to prejudices and other such walls that our "fathers" have put in place? Frost is suggesting that we should examine these barriers and decide if they are really beneficial and applicable to our lives today.
People often put up a barrier out of habit -apex approved
We get along better when we mind our boundaries.
Robert frosts poems are modernist
No People are saying she Is But She Is Not
New England's nature.
No, "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost is not an elegy. It is a narrative poem that explores themes of tradition, boundaries, and the nature of relationships between neighbors.
suck some wang
his favorite hobby is football
Slapping his friend Taher
The poem Mending Walls was written by Robert Frost just before the World War I. It was a reminder of his life in the US. The neighbor spoken of is the moral principles behind mending a wall.
William Prescott Frost Jr.
boob
because he was sad and depressed :(
The alliteration in "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost can be found in phrases like "spring mending-time" and "before I built." These examples show repetition of the same initial consonant sound in close proximity, creating a musical effect in the text.