Frost noticed that his neighbors repaired the wall with stones in their respective hands, "armed like the savages of the old stone." "He was in the dark as if it were me." "This poem is a metaphor of neighborhood friendship, I think that frost is unnecessary for the wall, frost admits that a wall is necessary from time to time, he is a case of a cow crossing the property of a neighbor Frost and his neighbors do not have livestock, they only have trees, and Frost crosses the boundary of characteristics in order that his apple tree eats the pine cones of neighboring pine trees It was pointed out.
Richard Poirier of Robert Frost (1990) advocates an interesting point. It is not the neighbor who starts repairing the wall (he thinks "Good fence is a good neighbor"). "I will tell my neighbor to the other side of the hill." Mr. Poirier proposed to "make a neighbor if there is no fence". Reticent For a long and wise debate about this poem, see John C. Kemp, Robert Frost, and New England: poets as regionalists (1979).
In Robert Frost's poem "Restoring the Wall", the poet considers the value and other aspects of the border. When considering whether a fence can be a good neighbor, he includes all obstacles and boundaries - including walls. He is worried that this sentence will become very popular (and snoring) will soon become obsolete. He wondered if the land always threatens each other thoroughly and is constantly seeking certain kinds of obstacles. For example, Apple does not pose a threat to cattle and forest trees. But others may feel different - depending on the content of the property and the belief of the neighbor. Some people think that knowing the appearance of neighbors is meaningless - just throwing out the wall and finishing the wall - so everyone is happy. There is no invasion, so there is no conflict. Frost wants to know if there are other ways - especially related to world problems like the Cold War.