Respuesta :
The play is about the transcendence of life.
Explanation:
The life in the play takes utmost importance over the things the people consider to be life.
All the props in the play are used as pantomime so as to suggest that all those things are not actually important for Life but are only there because we have them there.
The real happiness is the ability to live itself, and to have the life that one wants to have and to do things that they want to do which is something that one does not realize while they are alive.
Answer:
the motif of pantomiming everyday actions contributes to the play's larger meaning by letting the audience know that the human life is the most important of all things. (the chairs are irrelevent)
Explanation:
specific examples include:
"All of the characters' actions — such as shelling beans, delivering newspapers, or leading horses — are pantomimed and use no actual props."
"no one really sees how wonderful life is — even ordinary life."
"human beings "don't understand" the beauty of the lives they live."