In Shakespeare's "Macbeth," the porter pretends to let a variety of humorous characters into hell, including a farmer, an equivocator, and an English tailor. This scene provides comic relief after the suspenseful murder of King Duncan.
In Act 2, Scene 3 of Macbeth, the porter imagines he is the porter of Hell's gate, which he jokes about by referencing different types of sinners and the punishments they will face in Hell. He creates a dark and humorous atmosphere contrasted with the serious events happening in the play.
The Porter imagines he is tending the Gates of Hell.
the porter
that macbeth's castle is like hell, but then he says that hell is worse than macbeth's castle
She's pretending let it go.
All Hell Let Loose has 748 pages.
No one gets out of hell and no saint would be sent to hell.
A porter is simply the man who is in charge of the gate. He's the one that opens it and closes it, and makes sure people who aren't supposed to come in don't. The porter from Macbeth, specifically, is the comic relief after Duncan is murdered. Shakespeare knew that he had to keep people interested, and thus needed to put in something funny. The porter has been drinking all night, and when he hears Macduff and Lennox knocking, he imagines that he is porter to the gates of Hell. He then proceeds to imagine what kind of people he would let in. I hope this helps.
you go to the porter closet and there you will find the porters extra uniform then you custimize your character
All Hell Let Loose was created on 2011-09-29.
No. "Let's Do It" is controlled by Warner Brothers.
Cole Porter