How does William Shakespeare compare the human life to the theatrcalstage in the extract all the world's a stage
Answers
Answered by
0
Answer:
William Shakespeare uses the entire poem “All the World’s a Stage” as a metaphor to compare the stages of life to a theatrical stage.He explains how the rolls we play throughout our lives are like the rolls an actor plays on stage.
Answered by
1
William Shakespeare compares human life to the theatrical stage in the extract "All the World's a Stage" by using exaggerating metaphors and showing how each and every person play individual roles in life like that on a stage.
Some noticing points from the extract:
- Shakespeare writes about how men and women in this world put up a facade to make things up like acts on a theatre stage.
- The periods in life from juvenile to adulthood are presented as stages in order played by the players(human individuals).
- He describes how different stages comes in life one after the other like an infant, a school-going boy, a lover, a soldier, an old age man.
All the world's a stage is a remarkable monolouge from William Shakespeare's AS YOU LIKE IT describing about the seven roles played by men and women(the players) and ultimately exiting the world-like stage.
Similar questions