Another extraordinary work of Robert Frost maintains the tradition of formal poetry in Literature. The speaker talks about a stone wall that separates him from his neighbor, and that every year they meet to jointly mend, and repair every kind of damages made by hunters. The struggle here is that for the speaker, he does not understand why it is so important to have boundaries between them when there are only pine trees and apples. During the poem, the neighbor just came up with an old adage, “Good fences make good neighbors.” The speaker all he wanted was to get his neighbor to look beyond that old style reasoning but in the poem seems to be impossible.
In Frost’s form of writing, especially in this poem, we can see how he main