Where does shakespeare talk about his life in his plays?
Answer Hi Tyler, 1) We don’t know who the Dark Lady of the sonnets was. Shakespeare never named her, and we don’t have enough records from his time to be sure who he was referring to, or even if he was referring to a real person. There has been much speculation as to who she might have been. Some guesses are the poet Emilia Lanier, Mary Fitton or Lucy Morgan. But we have no particular reason to believe that the sonnets were autobiographical or that the dark lady was anything but a fictional character. 2) Shakespeare wrote his plays to be performed immediately. He wrote for the company that he was part of as an actor, playwright and part-owner, and his plays were performed as soon as they were written. And he retired from writing and acting in 1613, three years before he died. So he lived to see all of his 37 or 38 plays performed. 3) We don’t know that Shakespeare DOES talk about his life in his plays. Most playwrights do draw on their own experiences to write their plays, so it is lik