The phrase occurs in Henry IV Part 1 as part of Hotspur's death speech.
O, Harry, thou hast robb'd me of my youth!
I better brook the loss of brittle life
Than those proud titles thou hast won of me;
They wound my thoughts worse than sword my flesh:
But thought's the slave of life, and life time's fool;
And time, that takes survey of all the world,
Must have a stop. O, I could prophesy,
But that the earthy and cold hand of death
Lies on my tongue: no, Percy, thou art dust
And food for-
Fortunately he dies at this point or he could have gone on for hours. What Hotspur is saying is that thought is the slave of life, and life is the slave (fool) of time. He only has life when he has time, and he only has thoughts when he has life. He has run out of time, and so he has run out of life, and so he rather abruptly runs out of thoughts.
In King Lear, the Fool abruptly disappears after Act 3. Why? It could be that the same actor played the Fool and Cordelia, and since Cordelia is onstage with Lear a lot at the end of the play, the Fool had to disappear.
What do you mean if Shakespeare have it? If you mean does Shakespeare have what it takes, then yes. He should any way.
When you say "Shakespeare's Globe" you mean the reconstruction of the first Globe Theatre which opened in London in 1997. The most popular play at Shakespeare's Globe is Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors, which has been produced 5 times, followed by Romeo and Juliet and A Midsummer Night's Dream (4 times each) and Howard Brenton's Anne Boleyn (3 times)
Shakespeare cannot be mean - he has been dead for centuries.
It means that Romeo was played by fortune, as his killing of Tybalt out of defense, was the cause of him being exiled.
Shakespeare
The line "Love's not Time's fool" is from Shakespeare's Sonnet #116. The meaning of the quotation hinges on the meaning of the word "fool". This word had a number of meanings to Shakespeare including a stupid person, a professional jester or comic and a child. The meaning here is the same as in the line from Romeo and Juliet, "O, I am Fortune's Fool!", where fool means a dupe, a gull, a slave or lackey. In the sonnet, Time and Love are personified, but Love, says Shakespeare, is not the lackey or servant of Time, so that whether we love or not can be controlled by the passage of time. The theme of the sonnet as a whole is that true love withstands time; it is eternal and unchanging.
To 'play the Roman fool' is to commit suicide. The term was used in Shakespeare's Macbeth.
"A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool". -Shakespeare
means love will never com
The line "Love's not Time's fool" is from Shakespeare's sonnet #116. The meaning of the quotation hinges on the meaning of the word "fool". This word had a number of meanings to Shakespeare including a stupid person, a professional jester or comic and a child. The meaning here is the same as in the line from Romeo and Juliet, "O, I am Fortune's Fool!", where fool means a dupe, a gull, a slave or lackey. In the sonnet, Time and Love are personified, but Love, says Shakespeare, is not the lackey or servant of Time, so that whether we love or not can be controlled by the passage of time. The theme of the sonnet as a whole is that true love withstands time; it is eternal and unchanging.
Nobody did. The quotation "I would the fool were married to her grave" is from the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare wrote this line in "Twelfth Night." It is spoken by Feste, a wise fool character, reflecting on the balance between intelligence and foolishness in a person.
"Fortune's fool" is a phrase made famous by Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet. It refers to someone who is subject to the whims of fate and appears to be controlled by chance or luck, often to their detriment. It implies that the person is unaware of their own role in shaping their destiny.
Very possibly the same actor played the Fool and Cordelia. They do not appear on stage at the same time. When Cordelia returned from France the Fool had to disappear.
In King Lear, the Fool abruptly disappears after Act 3. Why? It could be that the same actor played the Fool and Cordelia, and since Cordelia is onstage with Lear a lot at the end of the play, the Fool had to disappear.
it means dam fool it means dam fool it means dam fool