We aren't sure, but it is usually looked at as a narrator equivalent to the author (philosophical male), and different from the neighbor in that he doesn't like the idea of walls, and wants to only use them when necessary.
In "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost, the narrator is a speaker who questions the need for a wall between neighbors and challenges the tradition of wall-building. The narrator's perspective serves as a contrast to his neighbor's belief in the wall's necessity.
In Robert Frost's "The Mending Wall," the narrator meets his neighbor once away. The poem explores the theme of "Good fences make for good neighbors." The theme explores isolationism. The narrator jokes that his apple trees will never get over the fence to feed on his trees' pine cones.
It is a person living on a farm, who was walking and talking with his neighboring farmer alongside the wall between their farms.
An apple orchard.
Pine trees
Mending Wall was created in 1914.
Mending Wall - album - was created in 1987.
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.
Yes, there are symbols in Mending Wall. The symbols in Mending Walls helps in explaining various allegory, imagery and symbolism.
The wall in Mending Wall symbolizes the political, social, physical, and emotional walls that we face in our lives. And the fact that we ourselves may be building them.
In the poem "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost, the narrator's neighbor initiates the annual fence repair project. The neighbor believes in the traditional saying, "Good fences make good neighbors," and sees the maintenance of the wall as a way to maintain boundaries and relationships.
Apple trees -APEX
Reflective or questioning
The similes in the poem "Mending Wall" by Robert Frost are located throughout the text. For example, the comparison of the neighbor to an old-stone savage and the wall to an ancient-stone savage are two prominent similes found in the poem.
"Mending Wall" by Robert Frost is told from a first-person perspective, with the speaker reflecting on his interactions with his neighbor while working together to repair their shared stone wall.