All the world's stage- how the poet compare the last stage
Answers
Explanation:
This isn’t an isolated poem, but you’re right; it is poetry. It’s written in blank verse and has the feeling of poetry as well. It’s from Shakespeare’s comedy As You Like It.
For complicated reasons, the Duke has been forced into exile. Now he and his entourage are in the Forest of Arden. Jaques, who delivers the speech you mention (popularly referred to as The Seven Ages of Man), is one of the Duke’s lords — the verbose one. I’m told his name is pronounced “jakes,” which then as now (where I grew up) was slang referring to a despised but essential place in our daily lives. You’ll find the speech in Act II, scene vii. It begins:
“All the world’s a stage,
And all the men and women merely players:
They have their exists and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts
Answer:
du BC etc as
Explanation:
g jg success et bhej Hz