That is an incredibly subjective question, and I'm sure many people could come up with a multitude of different answers. All and all, there seems to be strong themes of fate vs free will. Do we actually control our own lives or are they prewritten like the very plays he wrote? I also think that he realizes the two things that all humanity can identify with: sorrow and laughter. This is the place where we all have something in common, which is why his work has lasted so long through the ages as classical literature.
Shakespeare's works often explore universal themes such as love, power, jealousy, and betrayal. While there may not be a single underlying message in all his works, common themes include the complexities of human nature, the consequences of ambition, and the passage of time. His plays pose questions about morality, fate, and the human experience.
A story or poem's theme may be conveyed through its characters, setting, symbols, and plot events. These elements work together to communicate the underlying message or central idea of the work to the reader.
All seasons.
They were all back in Stratford.
Males
They all have the form abab.
"The underlying goal of all our work is a green and peaceful world - an earth that is ecologically healthy and able to nurture life in all its diversity."
log on to the internet from your phone and put in the number u would like to message and message them that's all
There's a site where all of his works are at the link below.
I am still reading them because I have not yet memorized them all.
She did not "work on a farm". Her father was a farmer and she lived in a farmhouse because that is where her family lived. She was not a farm labourer. All that ended, we suppose, when she married Shakespeare.
The censor, who in Shakespeare's day was the Master of the Revels, Edmund Tilney.
They All were male actors