Timon of Athens is William Shakespeare's 29th play, composed around
1606. Literary enthusiasts accept that he co-composed the play with
Thomas Middleton, one of his best counterparts. Considered a misfortune,
it has a few components; it is interesting among Shakespeare's works for
being fragmented and not so perfect as his different plays. The play's
topics incorporate human avarice, lack of appreciation, and the
potentially bad repercussions of outrageous liberality.