"Mending Wall" (1914)
Robert Frost:
Every year, two neighbours meet
to repair the stone wall that divides their property. The narrator is sceptical
of this tradition, unable to understand the need for a wall when there is no
livestock to be contained on the property, only apples and pine trees. He does
not believe that a wall should exist simply for the sake of existing. Moreover,
he cannot help but notice that the natural world seems to dislike the wall as
much as he does: mysterious gaps appear, boulders fall for no reason. The neighbour,
on the other hand, asserts that the wall is crucial to maintaining their
relationship, asserting, “Good fences make good neighbours.” Over the course of
the mending, the narrator attempts to convince his neighbour otherwise and
accuses him of being old-fashioned for maintaining the tradition so strictly.
No matter what the narrator says, though, the neighbour stands his ground,
repeating only: “Good fences make good neighbours.”
Analysis
This poem is the first work in
Frost's second book of poetry, “North of Boston,” which was published upon his
return from England in 1915. While living in England with his family, Frost was
exceptionally homesick for the farm in New Hampshire where he had lived with
his wife from 1900 to 1909. Despite the eventual failure of the farm, Frost
associated his time in New Hampshire with a peaceful, rural sensibility that he
instilled in the majority of his subsequent poems. “Mending Wall” is
autobiographical on an even more specific level: a French-Canadian named
Napoleon Guay had been Frost’s neighbour in New Hampshire, and the two had
often walked along their property line and repaired the wall that separated
their land. Ironically, the most famous line of the poem (“Good fences make
good neighbours”) was not invented by Frost himself, but was rather a phrase
that Guay frequently declared to Frost during their walks. This particular
adage was a popular colonial proverb in the middle of the 17th century, but
variations of it also appeared in Norway (“There must be a fence between good neighbours”),
Germany (“Between neighbour’s gardens a fence is good”), Japan (“Build a fence
even between intimate friends”), and even India (“Love your neighbour, but do
not throw down the dividing wall”).
In terms of form, “Mending Wall”
is not structured with stanzas; it is a simple forty-five lines of first-person
narrative. Frost does maintain iambic stresses, but he is flexible with the
form in order to maintain the conversational feel of the poem. He also shies
away from any obvious rhyme patterns and instead relies upon the occasional
internal rhyme and the use of assonance in certain ending terms (such as
“wall,” “hill,” “balls,” “well”).
In the poem itself, Frost creates
two distinct characters who have different ideas about what exactly makes a
person a good neighbor. The narrator deplores his neighbor’s preoccupation with
repairing the wall; he views it as old-fashioned and even archaic. After all,
he quips, his apples are not going to invade the property of his neighbour’s
pinecones. Moreover, within a land of such of such freedom and discovery, the
narrator asks, are such borders necessary to maintain relationships between
people? Despite the narrator’s sceptical view of the wall, the neighbour
maintains his seemingly “old-fashioned” mentality, responding to each of the
narrator’s disgruntled questions and rationalizations with nothing more than
the adage: “Good fences make good neighbours.”
As the narrator points out, the
very act of mending the wall seems to be in opposition to nature. Every year,
stones are dislodged and gaps suddenly appear, all without explanation. Every
year, the two neighbours fill the gaps and replace the fallen boulders, only to
have parts of the wall fall over again in the coming months. It seems as if
nature is attempting to destroy the barriers that man has created on the land,
even as man continues to repair the barriers, simply out of habit and
tradition.
Ironically, while the narrator
seems to begrudge the annual repairing of the wall, Frost subtley points out
that the narrator is actually more active than the neighbour. It is the
narrator who selects the day for mending and informs his neighbour across the
property. Moreover, the narrator himself walks along the wall at other points
during the year in order to repair the damage that has been done by local
hunters. Despite his skeptical attitude, it seems that the narrator is even
more tied to the tradition of wall-mending than his neighbor. Perhaps his
skeptical questions and quips can then be read as an attempt to justify his own
behavior to himself. While he chooses to present himself as a modern man, far
beyond old-fashioned traditions, the narrator is really no different from his
neighbor: he too clings to the concept of property and division, of ownership
and individuality.
Ultimately, the presence of the
wall between the properties does ensure a quality relationship between the two
neighbors. By maintaining the division between the properties, the narrator and
his neighbor are able to maintain their individuality and personal identity as
farmers: one of apple trees, and one of pine trees. Moreover, the annual act of
mending the wall also provides an opportunity for the two men to interact and
communicate with each other, an event that might not otherwise occur in an
isolated rural environment. The act of meeting to repair the wall allows the
two men to develop their relationship and the overall community far more than
if each maintained their isolation on separate properties.
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