Monday, 27 March 2023

All The Worlds A Stage




All The Worlds A Stage: William Shakespeare 



The first stage is that of an infant who cries. vomiting milk on the nurse’s arms. 

In the second stage,  as a schoolboy, he drags himself unwillingly to school. 

In the third stage. man as a lover, sighs in separation and writes poems about his beloved beauty. 

As a soldier, in the fourth stage, he is ready to take strange oaths. The poet compares him to a fierce leopard who is jealous Of others’ honour and is very quick to quarrel. He is ready to risk his life for a short-lived reputation by jumping in front of a cannon. 

The fifth stage is the justice stage, well-fed with chicken. His appearance is formal and he looks mature. He uses wise sayings, proverbs and examples from the modern age. This is where he has reached middle age and gained maturity. 

Old age is the sixth stage of a man’s life, where he wears pantaloons and slippers on his feet. He is now thin, lean and weak, and his eyesight too has become weak. His manly voice has turned into the shrill voice of a child. Where he speaks it appears as if he were playing upon a pipe or as if he were whistling (due to gaps in his teeth some of which have fallen out). 

The last stage of man’s life is dotage. In this stage, he is somewhat senile, completely dependent on others and helpless like a child as he is now nearing death. This is the stage of second childhood, as like a child, at this stage a man needs help with everything. He loses his teeth. eyesight and taste and becomes forgetful. This completes his part in the play of life, as after this he leaves the stage, or in other words, he dies.




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