In Robert Frost's poem "Mending Wall", the narrator has (C.) an apple orchard on his side of the wall.
"Mending Wall" is a poem by Robert Frost and it is part of <em>North of Boston, </em>his second collection of poetry. <u>The poem focuses on the speaker's relationship with his neighbour and the wall that separates them</u>. Although the speaker questions the purpose of the wall throughout the poem, his neighbour thinks that "Good fences make good neighbours". Therefore, <u>while the narrator has an apple orchard on his side of the wall, his neighbour has a pine ("He is all pine and I am apple orchard")</u>. The wall is a symbol in the poem since instead of representing a barrier, it is a sign of the bond that exists between the two neighbours.
The correct answer should be Poole confesses his belief that he feels something is wrong, the butler believes a murder has been committed in the laboratory, Poole states his belief that the masked figure is Mr. Hyde. These are the options that include instinctive behavior and not just random acts that can be controlled or things like the nature roaring which isn't instinct.
Answer:
both speak of death
Explanation:
taking a ride to the grave; remembering that God is present in everything we do and I do not have to go to the church to "see" him or worship him