<P> The comparison of the world to a stage and people to actors long predated Shakespeare . Juvenal, the ancient Roman poet, wrote one of the earliest versions of this line in his "Satire 3": "All of Greece is a stage, and every Greek's an actor ." Richard Edward's play Damon and Pythias, written in the year Shakespeare was born, contains the lines, "Pythagoras said that this world was like a stage / Whereon many play their parts; the lookers - on, the sage". When it was founded in 1599 Shakespeare's own theatre, The Globe, may have used the motto Totus mundus agit histrionem (All the world plays the actor), the Latin text of which is derived from a 12th - century treatise . Ultimately the words derive from quod fere totus mundus exercet histrionem (because almost the whole world are actors) attributed to Petronius, a phrase which had wide circulation in England at the time . </P> <P> In his own earlier work, The Merchant of Venice, Shakespeare also had one of his main characters, Antonio, comparing the world to a stage: </P> <P> I hold the world but as the world, Gratiano; A stage where every man must play a part, And mine a sad one . </P> <P> In his work The Praise of Folly, first printed in 1511, Renaissance humanist Erasmus asks, "For what else is the life of man but a kind of play in which men in various costumes perform until the director motions them off the stage ." </P>

All the world's a stage and all the man and woman