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Mending Wall 16226 Views
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Description:
Why not just buy a new wall? We're sure Mr. Frost would be okay with it.
Transcript
- 00:01
Mending Wall, a la Shmoop. Those poets sure like their metaphors, don’t
- 00:09
they?
- 00:10
Frost’s poem, Mending Wall, centers on the repairing of a literal wall…
- 00:15
…but we all know it’s not really about the wall.
- 00:19
What metaphorical wall is he talking about here?
Full Transcript
- 00:23
In the poem, we are introduced to a couple of neighbors…
- 00:28
…who are rebuilding the wall that exists between the two properties.
- 00:31
Apparently, it was a tough winter. Maybe Santa missed a rooftop.
- 00:37
Is Frost talking about the walls we put up between ourselves and our neighbors?
- 00:43
Most of us are pretty picky about the people we spend our time with.
- 00:47
Between our friends, our co-workers… and those members of our family who haven’t
- 00:51
driven us completely crazy.
- 00:55
Perhaps Frost is saying that, if we lower our guard a little bit…
- 00:58
…we might forge a connection with someone we never considered…
- 01:02
…someone who has been right under our nose the entire time.
- 01:08
Our culture used to have a much stronger sense of community.
- 01:12
In fact, in many other parts of the world, it’s not unheard of to invite someone you
- 01:16
just met back to your place for a bite to eat.
- 01:18
And, unlike in America, there is less than a 1 in 4 chance that either party is an axe
- 01:23
murderer. But nowadays, we’re too afraid to let other
- 01:27
people in…
- 01:27
…and we might be missing out on some potential friendships.
- 01:33
Or are we taking Frost too literally?
- 01:36
Maybe this poem isn’t about neighbors specifically, but about the walls we put up to keep everyone
- 01:41
out. Think about all the things you don’t say
- 01:45
to the people you do care about.
- 01:47
It might be for the best. We’re not sure your grandma’s ticker could take it if she
- 01:51
knew how you really felt about last year’s Christmas present.
- 01:58
But the fact is that most of us are fairly closed-off.
- 02:02
Frost could be telling us that we need to… let our boulders down, so to speak…
- 02:07
…that we could be having richer life experiences, and grow as individuals, if only we weren’t
- 02:13
so stubbornly detached all of the time.
- 02:15
Right, Mr. Potato Head? But… it never hurts to keep digging deeper
- 02:20
when analyzing a poem.
- 02:22
Could Frost be referring to walls we put up in our own heads to keep us from knowing the
- 02:27
truth?
- 02:28
This conversation between the two neighbors sounds an awful lot like one person undergoing
- 02:32
an internal struggle…
- 02:33
…almost as if he’s trying to convince himself of something he doesn’t quite believe.
- 02:38
At one point, the narrator says to his neighbor:
- 02:42
“Before I built a wall I’d ask to know… what I was walling in or walling out.”
- 02:49
This line seems to indicate that the wall may not just be keeping others out…
- 02:53
…it may also be keeping the wall-builder himself fenced in.
- 02:58
The human skull is impenetrable enough… do we really need to be constructing more
- 03:03
walls in that head of ours?
- 03:06
Our brains must be getting awfully stir crazy… So… is Frost worried that we’re walling
- 03:12
out our neighbors?
- 03:13
Or the rest of the world?
- 03:15
Or is it more a matter of us walling ourselves in?
- 03:18
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
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