English, asked by saniapednekar78, 9 months ago

Eyes severe and beard of formal cut. Figure of speech as inversion and it's explanation.

Answers

Answered by ishwarjot4455568
5

Answer:

bread of formal cut refers to how people are more relaxed In their appearance when young

Answered by ZareenaTabassum
0

The Answer is:

This is from William Shakespeare's sonnet "Seven Ages of Man."

  • As a guy grows older and gains experience, his personality and maturity are reflected in his eyes.
  • Beard of formal cut refers to how people are relaxed in their look while they are young and then become serious later in life, changing their formal way of dressing in order to pursue their chosen job to earn a living.
  • His eyes are serious, and his beard is a formal cut, implying his stern demeanour.

  • The poem offers a philosophical look at existence and our place in it.
  • It simplifies the complexities of human life into extremely simple stages and draws broad generalisations about how an individual grows in life.
  • In only seven phrases, Jacques' discourse covers the entirety of human life and the poet's perspective on it.
  • The debate provides compelling evidence for the poet's argument about the futility of life.
  • This sentiment is well explored in the play. In the same scene, for example, we see the line 'And so from hour to hour we ripe and ripe, and then from hour to hour we rot and rot, and thus hangs a tale.'
  • This reinforces the dialogue's attitude of futility of life even more.

SPJ3

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