The Stone Wall Initiative
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Ornamental wall at gated, front entrance of an estate. Built with a mix of fieldstone and quarrystone from northeastern, Connecticut.
 

Introduction - Language Arts - Investigating Walls

Mending Wall of Robert Frost, Derry, NH. Actually, this is only the east wall, where the stone loaves and balls reside. The other side of the property, on the west, is where Frost walked the line with his neighbor.

Stone walls are evocative features. This is as true for children today as it was for the literary giants of New England culture.

BACKGROUND

Stone walls are in the background for the New England literature, especially works by the Transcedentalists. They convey a sense of material strength, cultural ruin, Yankee expedience, the depth of time, and of elemental simplicity.

ACTIVITIES

Robert Frost's Mending Wall: Of all humanists to use New England's stone walls as literary devices, the poet Robert Frost stands at the head of the pack. His most famous poem, Mending Wall, is often required reading for students as soon as they are aable to understand symbolism, metaphor, and myth. Others by Frost with stone wall themes include Ghost House and Star in a Stone Boat. Have your students read and discuss any of these poems.

Responsive Writing: Professor Thorson has suggested that "The soul of New England perches on a rock." (Encyclopedia of New England, Yale Univ. Press, 2005, p. 567-569). He believes that many New Englanders have a subconscious yearning to see the earth's crust each day. Stone walls give such folks their best opportunity to sense the presence of deep time. Bring your students to a convenient stone wall, have them dwell on such themes, ask them to write, and see what happens.

Link back to Investigating Walls - Introduction