Porter Scene in Macbeth
It
has been doubted even by Alexander Pope
and Samuel Taylor Coleridge whether
the Porter Scene (Act 2, Scene 3) is originally from William Shakespeare’s pen. Pope thought it unworthy of Shakespeare;
Coleridge admitted only “The primrose path to the everlasting bonfire” as
Shakespearean. The modern critics on William
Shakespeare consider this scene as genuinely from the pen of Shakespeare. They
claim:
1. The Porter Scene is an integral part of the play as there was a knocking in the hell-gate in the
last scene; a porter is necessary to
answer the knocking and he must have something to say.
2. It
is relief to the surrounding horror.
3. It is necessary according to the law of comic contrast observe elsewhere.
The
Porter’s speech is dramatically constituted the poor element of the play
Macbeth. It is a powerful piece of irony without which the play would be poor. The
Porter becomes a symbol of the Porter of Hell-gate as we come across in the
Morality Plays in the Middle Ages. The Porter of course is a comic figure who contributes
to the theme of equivocation. When the murder is over, we find the Porter
coming on the stage, drunken and fanciful:
"Here’s a knocking, indeed! If a man were a Porter of Hell Gate, he should have old turning the keys.”
Many
critics think that the Porter’s speech serves as the greatest speech of
dramatic irony. The Porter refers to Beelzebub, the devil who is worshipped in
Palestine. He is also described in the New Testament as ‘the Prince of the
Devils’. The Porter also refers to the other devils’ name who can be identified
as Satan.
Also Read:
👉Explained Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow Soliloquy
The Porter fancies that he admits three men to hell. These three are a farmer, a Jesuit equivocator and an English tailor. The farmer was greedy and hoarded the corn “on the expectation of the plenty” of corn, and of the consequent plenty of profit. He expected the price to rise and fetch him a huge profit. The prospect of good harvest frustrated his hopes. In despair, he hanged himself. Suicide is a sin and therefore the farmer is in hell.
The second man to enter hell was a
Jesuit, an equivocator. Jesuits were accused of encouraging equivocation upon
the oath of swearing and foreswearing. The reference is to the trial of Henry
Garnet, the conspirator and the supporter of Jesuits in England. It historically
refers to the Gun-Powder plot of 1605. In the Gun-powder plot, Henry Garnet
tried to defend his perjuries by means of the doctrine of equivocation. Here metaphorically
the equivocator is Macbeth, who equivocates so cleverly in the earlier scene
(Murder Scene, Act 2, Scene 2).
The third candidate for admission to
the porter's hell is an English tailor who cut cloth out of a French hose which
is traditionally close-fitting. It implies that the tailor is destined to go to
hell because over-reaching himself. Here the tailor also represents, the
overreaching self for Macbeth who is but to “Roast the goose”- smoothing the
iron for the appropriate reason.
The porter says all these under the
influence of wine. When his drunkenness goes off, his vision fades, and as the
cold bites him, he comes slowly into an awareness of the reality around him:
"I pray you, remember the Porter."
The Porter refers to Dante’s
description of devil in Inferno. The devil is the other name of the traitor of
the king, country and friend.
The porter's speech is a relief to the tragic tension and terror of earlier scenes. It is a
convention of Elizabethan tragedy to
introduce a comic relief. The porter's speech in prose is full of
word-play and association that are a commentary on the main action of the play.
He is indeed porter of hell-gate,
Macbeth's castle being a hell, and Macbeth is seen as the Devil. His ramblings
effectively delay the discovery, so that with his lascivious humour and his stumblings
and natural comic effects, a degree of tension is built up in the audience and
the readers.
The porter speaks in true Calvinistic
fashion of damnation. It is the gate of hell because Lady Macbeth has called on
‘the murdering ministers'. The porter's
speech is prolepic as well as prophetic. It looks back to the execution of
the Thane of Cawdor who was guilty of treason, and looks forward to the
equivocation of the fiend' that lies like truth. Macbeth is guilty of
equivocation and hypocrisy and he cannot equivocate in heaven. Equivocation and
treason link it up with the main themes of the play.
The dialogue between the porter and
Macduff (which is often omitted from texts) provides a valuable clue to the
theme of appearance and reality. The opposition between conception and
execution, purpose and fulfilment and many antitheses that the play contains are
suggested here.
The Porter Scene is must for theatrical perfection because when the murder is done, Macbeth
and lady Macbeth need their hand wash. Their hands were tinged with the colour
of red. Therefore to give a rational space for the discharge of these action
Act 2, Scene 3 is an integral of the play. De Quincey in his famous article “On
the Knocking at the Gate” describes “When the deed is done, when the work of
darkness is perfect… the knocking at the gate is heard… it suspends our thought
process.” According to Grierson, “The Porter Scene allows the comic irony to
reach its climax.”
The Porter Scene is possibly one of the best comic scenes or comic interludes from the pen of the Elizabethan dramatist. For the Greeks the tragedy was a serious play; Christopher Marlowe, the University Wit introduces the comic relief (buffoonery) in his famous play Dr. Faustus as Seven Deadly Sins; in Hamlet, Shakespeare paints the Grave Digger Scene to satisfy comic relief in a drama full of suspense. In Macbeth, Porter’s speech which is charged with dramatic irony, pungent with the language of equivocation stands out as specimen of comic relief to attract the groundlings to theatre.
0 Comments
Post a Comment