It may be an example of found poetry, like when someone copies down a notice at a train station and calls that a poem. Shakespeare would not have called it a poem; it was never intended as such. It is a speech to be said during the play As You Like It. The character Jaques is responding to the Duke's comment that some people are worse off than they are. Jaques, who is of a depressed and cynical disposition, says (at some length, and with some humour) that everyone is pretty much the same, that they are all playing from the same script.
Evidently someone heard or read that speech and said, "Hey! that would make a great poem for the poetry anthology I'm putting together." But it's not really a poem at all.
It is neither. It is a speech, extracted from the play As You Like It by William Shakespeare. It is poetic, but it is not a poem since it is not intended to stand alone as a poem. It is not a sonnet--it does not rhyme as all sonnets do.Just for your info: If something is a sonnet then, believe me, it has to be a poem as well. Guaranteed.
All The Worlds a Stage.
It is not a poem, but rather a speech said by the character Jaques in the Shakespeare play As You Like It, Act 2 Scene vii. As You Like It was written around 1600 but not published until the First Folio in 1623.
*Figure of speech of the echoing green poem *First stanza of the poem is set in 'personification'Second stanza of the poem is set in 'antitesis'Last stanza of the poem is set in'simile'
personificaion
It is neither. It is a speech, extracted from the play As You Like It by William Shakespeare. It is poetic, but it is not a poem since it is not intended to stand alone as a poem. It is not a sonnet--it does not rhyme as all sonnets do.Just for your info: If something is a sonnet then, believe me, it has to be a poem as well. Guaranteed.
The figure of speech used in the poem "Gabu" by Carlos A. Angeles include simile, metaphor, personification, and hyperbole. These figures of speech help to enhance the imagery and convey the emotions and themes in the poem.
All The Worlds a Stage.
It is not a poem, but rather a speech said by the character Jaques in the Shakespeare play As You Like It, Act 2 Scene vii. As You Like It was written around 1600 but not published until the First Folio in 1623.
It's not a poem. It's a speech from the play As You Like It. And "foregrounding" is not a helpful term when discussing speeches or poetry, because all it means is emphasis, and of course there is emphasis in all speeches and poetry.
*Figure of speech of the echoing green poem *First stanza of the poem is set in 'personification'Second stanza of the poem is set in 'antitesis'Last stanza of the poem is set in'simile'
The figure of speech in the poem "To the Men of England" by Percy Bysshe Shelley is personification, as the poet addresses England as a personified entity that is being exploited and oppressed by the ruling class.
yes it as a matter of fact does...
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personificaion
poet is a person who creates poetry
personification - stole it ,darted shaft of lights