English, asked by aradhyakri, 11 months ago

what is the shakespeare's concept of life?​

Answers

Answered by nikhilsingh0404
11

Answer:

The world is a stage and life is a play in seven acts. Each act finds man adopting a role characteristic, suitable, and eventually destined by his material finitude. The speech compares the world to a stage and life to a play, and catalogues the seven stages of a man's life, sometimes referred as the Seven Ages of Man.

Answered by hotelcalifornia
6

Shakespeare 's concept of life is the world is a stage and life is a play in seven acts. Each act finds man adopting a role characteristic, suitable, and eventually destined by his material finitude.

Explanation:

  • The attitude and philosophy of Shakespeare is depicted from the themes of poetry and life. The themes provide a fair reflection of his thoughts.
  • History is an avid believer that Shakespeare admired Queen Elizabeth and she too gave a nod of approval to his work. She attended his plays from time to time.
  • Even he had enormous respect for women and the role that they went on to play in life.
  • Shakesphere is a most famous writer and he wrote many pomes base on the life and nature.

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