Emotional position of Shakespeare on love
Was Shakespeare a fool for believing so strongly in love? It's a simple question with a yes/no answer, but the complexity of this question is one that many people would debate on and disagree about.
So was Shakespeare a fool? He wrote many sonnets and stories pertaining to love, so it was frankly obvious that he had passion, but why? He lived a full rich life, essentially devoid of pain and emptiness, so does a man that lived like that have the wisdom to believe in something as fickle and complicated as love? Without experience, is he truly someone to believe in it?
I personally believe that he was a fool for believing in love. The love that most people "give" to others is faux and without just cause, and it has been like this throughout known history. Love is used as a cover for some to hide deep seated hatred, or to falsify someone into believing it just to seek revenge for a wrong done to them. Love is used by others as a means to lure people into a false sense of safety and compassion, just to rip it out from under them, leaving them falling into a void of no return.
Shakespeare spent his life writing about a feeling he had felt upon his marriage and the birth of his children, but without feeling other opposite and equally emotional feelings as love, he didn't know the true meaning of the word or the complexities behind it. This is just my opinion, but I've stated my reasons for them, now I would like feedback on this.
Shakespeare on Love or in Love
I find it rather amusing that you commented on how shakespeare knew of love as he was married and had children, and yet you then went on to say that he did not know of love.
I do not mean to offend but you seem rather cynical in your portrayal of love, and you could be wrong assuming that if shakespeare knew of the good side he never knew the other.
I don't particularly feel that shakespeare didn't know of true love, did you ever consider that part of being in love may be to portray it in a more bautiful light, to see all of the good in the other person. Did you not consider that it may actually have been love itself which caused shakespeare to write in the way he did? Often enough he puts love in a glorious light but i think that Shakespeare was well aware of the other side of love, of the possessiveness, jelousy and pain involved in loving someone.
Maybe to you it was not stated obviously enough but if you take 'the rape of lucrece' shakespeare explores both the obsessive and lusty form of love through Tarquinius and the possesive and glorifying love through Collatinus.
I believe that Shakespeare was a very observant man and i think that to say he had no idea of true love is rather an unobservant comment. Had shakespeare not been aware of love, had he not experienced it himself in some way, he could not have written plays which have stood up to such close inspection and criticism for hundreds of years.
If Shakespeares plays were so highly flawed, as you seem to think, i am sure they would have crumbled long ago. It is their strength, their truth and their integrity which makes them so famous.