You know what a bubble is: something that fills with air and grows and grows until pop! it's gone. The bubble is a metaphor for the transience of the kind of reputation the soldier seeks--it grows and grows and in an instant, it's gone. It's sort of like the fame of pop stars.
It's generally just treated as a quote. You could also call it a metaphor
"seeking the bubble reputation" comes from Jaques' monologue "All the world's a stage" from As You Like It, a play by William Shakespeare, which goes like this in part: Then a soldier, full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard, jealous in honor, sudden and quick in quarrel, seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's mouth. It means fame, which is notoriously transitory. Everybody may be talking about you one day, and the next it disappears like a burst bubble. The soldier is prepared to risk death for just such a reputation, and Jaques is suggesting that he's pretty stupid to do so.
"All the world's a stage," is modern English.
He trying to say all the worlds a stage its on big place and its quite frighten.
The phrase "All the world's a stage" was famously used by William Shakespeare in a speech given by the character Jaques in his play As You Like It. This is a comedy, so unsurprisingly, in the last scene about four couples get married by the god of marriage, Hymen.
It's generally just treated as a quote. You could also call it a metaphor
"seeking the bubble reputation" comes from Jaques' monologue "All the world's a stage" from As You Like It, a play by William Shakespeare, which goes like this in part: Then a soldier, full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard, jealous in honor, sudden and quick in quarrel, seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's mouth. It means fame, which is notoriously transitory. Everybody may be talking about you one day, and the next it disappears like a burst bubble. The soldier is prepared to risk death for just such a reputation, and Jaques is suggesting that he's pretty stupid to do so.
It's a speech. If you present it, you use the words Shakespeare wrote. You do not add any topics to what is contained in the piece.
Shakespeare uses the phrase in Jaques's "All the world's a stage" speech (2.7.138-165) in As You Like It. According to dictionary.net, one of the definitions (now obsolete) for bubble is: "A person deceived by an empty project." Since the soldier to whom the bard is referring is said to be "Seeking the bubble reputation / Even in the canon's mouth," bubble reputation could mean fame for participating in a project one believe's to be meaningful but is, in fact, not worthwhile. Shakespeare seems to be referring to a soldier's desire for renown based on his efforts in battle, even to the extent that he would sacrifice his life, but that this effort is empty because the war he is fighting is not noble or even necessary. Alternate View: A bubble is fragile and easily destroyed as is a mans reputation. The cannon's mouth is not that of his own cannon but the enemy's. He seeks that which is most fragile at a dangerous place, and therefore values his reputation highly, highly enough to risk his life for it. It is not wise to put 21st century values on 16th century words, and doubly unwise to put 21st Century thoughts and attitudes into 16th Century minds, the fit is poor at best.
A speech made by one about a specific topic is a monologue. A soliloquy is a dramatic speech made on stage.
The earliest stage of speech development is referred to as the prelinguistic stage. During this stage, infants communicate through gestures, crying, and vocalizations before they start producing recognizable words.
Speech Stage Fright and What to Do About It - 1949 was released on: USA: 1949
free admision
"All the world's a stage," is modern English.
He trying to say all the worlds a stage its on big place and its quite frighten.
Because its malandi
The phrase "All the world's a stage" was famously used by William Shakespeare in a speech given by the character Jaques in his play As You Like It. This is a comedy, so unsurprisingly, in the last scene about four couples get married by the god of marriage, Hymen.