"I don't stand still and look around on all the hills I haven't hoed." This example is the third and fourth sentence of A Time to Talk. In this part, the man is standing on the hills and he sees his friend out on the road. He stands and looks around and says to himself this work won't get any harder and decides that friends are more important than work so he goes for a visit. Robert Frost's opinion is that work is important but if your buddies are in need you have to be there for them and not at work. Being there for your friends pays off because if you are there for a friend, they will be there for you. The lesson learned is that you will always have your friends but your work will change all the time.
Frost writes, "I thrust my hoe in the mellow ground, Blade-end up and five feet tall." This example is in the 7th and 8th line of A Time to Talk. This means that he put his hoe in the ground and was about to walk over to his friend. So the man obviously cared about the relationship with his friend more than hoeing the hills. If a man got a call from his friend and his friend needed him if he just went to work instead of going to his friend he would probably lose that friendship. But if he went to his friend and he ever needed him than his friend would come to him. So the lesson is that if you put friends before work than they will probably put you in front of work too. Having friends and being well liked makes you feel much better about yourself, than being lonesome and not having friends.
One example is the 9th and 10th lines of the poem, Frost writes, "And plod: I go up to the stone wall, for a friendly