In Shakespeare's works, the term "lease" often refers to a legal agreement granting temporary possession of property or land to a tenant in exchange for rent. It can also symbolize the concept of time or duration, as in the "lease" of life or love, suggesting a limited or conditional nature. Shakespeare frequently uses this term to explore themes of ownership, transience, and the human condition.
Shakespeare is talking about enduring beauty or grace, and relates this to the comparatively short length of a single season of the year.
What do you mean if Shakespeare have it? If you mean does Shakespeare have what it takes, then yes. He should any way.
Shakespeare cannot be mean - he has been dead for centuries.
In this line from Sonnet 18, "and summer's lease hath all too short a date," Shakespeare metaphorically compares summer to a lease or rental period that is temporary and fleeting. He suggests that the beauty and warmth of summer, much like youth and life, are transient and eventually come to an end. This highlights the inevitability of change and the passage of time, emphasizing that all things beautiful are subject to decay and loss. Ultimately, the line sets the stage for the poem's exploration of immortality through art and memory.
William Shakespeare wrote this. The line appears in sonnet 18.
Shakespeare is talking about enduring beauty or grace, and relates this to the comparatively short length of a single season of the year.
What do you mean if Shakespeare have it? If you mean does Shakespeare have what it takes, then yes. He should any way.
Shakespeare cannot be mean - he has been dead for centuries.
In this line from Sonnet 18, "and summer's lease hath all too short a date," Shakespeare metaphorically compares summer to a lease or rental period that is temporary and fleeting. He suggests that the beauty and warmth of summer, much like youth and life, are transient and eventually come to an end. This highlights the inevitability of change and the passage of time, emphasizing that all things beautiful are subject to decay and loss. Ultimately, the line sets the stage for the poem's exploration of immortality through art and memory.
William Shakespeare wrote this. The line appears in sonnet 18.
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When people say Shakespeare they mean William Shakespeare the playwright. There was only ever one of him.
Shakespeare was born in 1564, if that's what you mean. That was the year he started being Shakespeare.
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The Globe Theatre was built in 1599.The theatre called Shakespeare's Globe was opened in 1997. The one Shakespeare acted in should never be called Shakespeare's Globe or William Shakespeare's Globe since he didn't own it and had nothing to do with its construction. For the sake of clarity, that theatre should be called The Globe Playhouse or The First Globe.
No lease does not mean no rules. If a tenant causes excessive damages you can still sue them.