Unit:2
Lesson:3
All the World's a Stage
Summary
The poet compares the world to a stage in a theater, and men and women to the actors. Every actor has his/her exit and entrance. Similarly, a person enters the world when he is born and leaves it when he dies. In his life he plays seven different roles based on his age.
The first role of the drama of human life is infancy. In this act, a child completely depends on a nurse. He cries and vomits in the nurse’s arms. In the second act he emerges as a school boy. In this role he complains all the time. His face shines like fresh morning. He carries his school bag and unwillingly goes to school as slowly as a snail. The third role is of a lover. The lover sighs like a furnace and composes serious poems to praise the beauty of his beloved.
The fourth role is played by a soldier. The soldier swears oaths and has a beard like a leopard. He is quick in battle. He looks for reputation even at the risk of his life. He is not afraid of death while fighting for reputation. However, his reputation is momentary like a bubble. The fifth role is of a judge. He has a fair round belly. He is fat from eating chicken. Firmness and maturity are reflected in his eyes. He has a well-shaped beard and looks relaxed. He uses many sayings and modern examples to support his arguments of wisdom.
The sixth act takes a person to his old age. He becomes weak and thin. He puts on slippers, spectacles, and trousers of his youth which do not fit his shrunk and thin legs. He keeps pouch with him. His manly voice turns into the childish treble. He pipes and whistles. The final role for which a person is responsible is second childhood. During this age the person becomes very old and behaves like a child. It’s the stage of nothingness. He loses all his senses, and quits this world.
Understanding the text
Answer the following questions.
Answer:
The poet compares the world with a stage because he believed that all men and women behave like the actors.
Answer:
The first stage in a human’s life is childhood. It can be a troubling stage as a child cries and vomits in the nurse’s arms.
Answer:
The second stage of life is school going boy. He complains all the time. His face is like shinning morning. He carries his bag and reluctantly goes to school as slowly as a snail.
Answer:
The last stage is called second childhood because he loses all his senses and behaves like a child.
Answer:
We are the players in the world stage as we appear on the world stage when we get birth and leave it when we die like the actors do on the stage in a theater.
Reference to the context
a. Explain the following lines:
All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players
In the given lines, the poet asserts that life is like a stage. All the men and women are believed to be actors who act in a drama of life. In a drama every actor enters the stage and acts his part. In the same way, every person plays different roles throughout his or her life as the actors do on the stage.
b. Explain the following lines briefly with reference to the context.
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,
The given lines are taken from the poem ‘All the world’s a stage’, composed by William Shakespeare. These lines express similarity between the roles the actors play on the stage and humans in their lives.
In a drama, every actor enters the stage, acts his role and then exits. In a similar way, we, enter the world stage when we are born and leave it at the time of death. Like the actors in a drama, we are assigned various roles to be performed. In a person’s life there are seven stages with different characters. When we get our roles completed we quit the stage of our life.
The poet wants us to realize the fact that human life is like the stage of a theatre. A man is fated to act several roles in his life.
c. Read the given lines and answer the questions that follow.
Then the whining schoolboy, with his satchel
And shining morning face, creeping like snail
Unwillingly to school.
Answer:
The second stage of life is being referred by the poet.
Answer:
Simile
Answer:
A school boy
Answer:
No, he doesn’t.
d. Simile and metaphor are the two major poetic devices used in this poem. Explain citing examples of each.
Shakespeare makes use of the first two metaphors in the lines ‘All the worlds’ a stage’, ‘all the men and women merely players’. He compares the world to a stage in a theater and all the men and women to actors who perform on the stage. The third metaphor is used when ‘reputation’ is compared to bubble to show that reputation is momentary. Another metaphor is created to equate manly voice to childish treble. The final metaphor is found in the line ‘that ends this strange eventful history’. Human life is compared to the strange eventful history as human life is full of events and incidents, and early memories.
The first simile is used when a school boy is compared to a snail. He unwillingly walks to school as slow as a snail. This figure of speech continues to compare the lover sighing to the furnace. The heat of the furnace is similar to the passion felt by the lover.By using simile, a soldier is likened to a leopard. This reveals that the soldier is quick, prompt and fast as the leopard
e. Which style does the poet use to express his emotions about how he thinks that the world is a stage and all the people living in it are mere players?
The poem is written in blank verse with regular metrical but unrhymed lines. The style of the poem is narrative. The narrator recounts the story of life. He compares human life to a stage and all the people to actors. One man in his time plays several roles. In a drama every actor enters the stage, acts his role and then exits. In a similar way, in real life, entrances and exits refer to births and deaths. People appear on the stage when they get birth, play their respective roles and leave the stage when they die. A person in his entire life has to complete seven stages.
f. What is the theme of this poem?
The theme of the poem is the cycle of human life. A person is destined to play seven different roles throughout his life. For everyone, birth is entrance and death is exit. Each role has its own qualities and features. The poem reveals how a person begins his life as an infant, and ends up in the same way, without being aware of what is happening with him. He is the ultimate loser in the game of life.
Can you add REFERENCE BEYOND THE TEXT too?
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Can u add refrence beyond the text too plzzz
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Deleteclass 11 What is poverty? also plzzzzzzz. The slides are very helpful....
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