0
Persian Learner Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

William Shakespeare Quote

Hi.

I can't understand the following quote by Shakespeare at all. Emotion: crying

For though the camomile, the more it is trodden on the faster it grows, yet youth, the more it is wasted, the sooner it wears.

I have the most problem with the underlined parts.
  

Top answer

He is comparing the delicate stage of youth to the (seemingly delicate) flower, the camomile. However, the more you step (tread) on a camomile, the faster it grows. But youth is not like that.

  • He is comparing the delicate stage of youth to the (seemingly delicate) flower, the camomile.
  • However, the more you step (tread) on a camomile, the faster it grows.
  • But youth is not like that.
  • The more you waste youth, the quicker it disappears.
  • Therefore, youth is even more delicate than a camomile.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
He is comparing the delicate stage of youth to the (seemingly delicate) flower, the camomile. However, the more you step (tread) on a camomile, the faster it grows. But youth is not like that. The more you waste youth, the quicker it disappears. Therefore, youth is even more delicate than a camomile.
0
teechrHe is comparing the delicate stage of youth to the (seemingly delicate) flower, the camomile. However, the more you step (tread) on a camomile, the faster it grows. But youth is not like that. The more you waste youth, the quicker it disappears. Therefore, youth is even more delicate than a camomile.
Thanks.
0
For = as (explanatory)
though = although

Related Questions