In “The Crucible”, Arthur Miller presents a city named Salem, with contradicting people. Throughout the story people accuse others of being witches or being involved with witchcraft so they could be hanged. Miller presents the idea that vengeance ruins people’s lives or reputation so that you can get what you want and be satisfied. Some people take revenge to protect themselves; they are scared of what would happen to them but they still do it or in this case, they accuse. In the beginning of this play, Arthur Miller says, “She is blackening my name in the village! She is telling lies about me! She is a cold, sniveling woman, and you bend to her!” (Act I, lines 460-462) Abigail is angry at Elizabeth for ruining her reputation. To protect herself, she talks about bad things that Elizabeth has done or is doing to Proctor. She is also jealous that Elizabeth is with Proctor which is also why she wants to make her seem bad. As the story goes on, Arthur Miller states, “Mr. Putnam, I have here an accusation by Mr. Corey against you. He states that you coldly prompted your daughter to cry witchery upon George Jacobs that is now in jail.” (Act III lines 395-398) Mr. Putnam actually risked his daughter by telling her to accuse someone of witchcraft. He tells his …show more content…
He probably decided to do that so the accused won’t do anything to him or also take revenge upon him. Thomas
In the play “The Crucible”, by Arthur Miller, grudges and personal rivalries play a huge role in the witch trials. Mary and Elizabeth get accused for witchcraft at one point of time in the book. They get accused because of the personal rivalry that Abigail and John Proctor have with each other. John Proctor and Abigail used to meet up behind the shed by the church. This brought them closer together and Abigail's feelings for John got worse and worse.
“She is blackening my name in the village! She is telling lies about me! She is a cold, sniveling woman, and you bend to her!” (Miller 1247). Abigail is concerned about what Elizabeth Proctor is saying about her around Salem.
An what I mean by that is she seizes any opportunity she has to divert blame from herself and Betty (her sister) by accusing others. Such as when she’s being accused of dancing in the forest she goes out of her way and blames Tituba of making them do the bad things they did (Act 1). Then once Abigail has the town all sympathetic for her she makes herself seen as an “afflicted child”, she then seizes the chance to accuse Elizabeth Proctor of witchcraft and get her out of the picture. (Act 2). Now, the reason that this makes her so despicable is because she accuses John Proctors wife of witchcraft just to get her out of the way so she can have Mr. Proctor all to herself, but what’s even worse is she already slept with him before, so now that she can’t ruin their marriage by having sleeping/having an affair with Mr. Proctor she’s just going to accuse Elizabeth Proctor of witchcraft and have her killed.
In the heat of the moment, he even accused his own wife. Corey accused her of reading books besides the Bible, which Puritans saw as suspicious, "then she close her book and walks out of the house, and suddenly— mark this—I could pray again!" (Miller 11). His wife was then arrested on accounts of witchcraft. Subsequent to this, he used a man’s testimony to prove that Mr. Putnam’s motives for his accusations were to gain land, showing that his wife’s accusations were also unjust.
Cameron Oldfield Mrs. Brincks English III 15 November, 2015 The Crucible and Red Scare Imagine being thrown in jail, blamed for something that you didn't do .The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, is a story about how certain propaganda and false accusations can ruin lives, just like in the case of the Red Scare. Although 1692 the Salem witch trials and the Red Scare were over 200 years apart, The similarities are striking. both trials used intimidation, fear, hatred, and false accusations to ruin innocent lives. Both trials resulted in terrible outcomes, with both ending with innocent people being put to death and shunned from society.
#160100 Advanced English The Crucible In history there are unforgettable events that were awful enough to be sewn into the back of our minds. The Salem witch trials happen to be one of these events. In Arthur Miller’s dark play, The Crucible, the trials are captivatingly retold using both fictional and historical information. Also in this play, he shows the weaknesses and wrongful things that people possess and do.
Imagine being hanged. Your body involuntarily pushed from a stoop, suspended by the rope wrapped suffocatingly around your neck. Imagine being ripped away from your family. Knowing you’re never going to see your children grow up. Knowing this is all because you wanted to keep your reputation alive and to keep your name from being tarnished.
Power in our society nowadays is very misgiven and abused. When people have power they tend to use it for their own benefit and to manipulate people into believing them. In the play, The Crucible, Arthur Miller dramatizes the Salem witch trials of 1692 in order to show his audience how easy it was to be accused and hung for witchcraft. In the Crucible a group of young girls were caught dancing in the woods and in order to not receive a punishment they lied saying they got witched. The girls blamed many people of the town of being witches and caused conflict all over the village.
Through the Salem witch trials, twenty-four innocent people lost their lives due to betrayal. They were hung because they were accused and found to be guilty of witchcraft. In reality, everyone that was accused and had died were innocent, but used as targets by others to save their own lives. In Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible, out of fear, Abigail Williams, Mary Warren, Mercy Lewis, and Reverend Hale betrayed their morals to save themselves. As a result of betrayal, lives were taken, relationships were ruined, and trusts were broken.
Shawn Jande Ms. Clancy American Literature B3 15 November 2015 The Crucible Analytical Essay Imagine, being accused of a crime you didn’t commit by your neighbors and friends out of jealousy, and desire. This is what many people in the town of Salem had to go through during the time of the Salem Witch Trials. People's motives such as: gaining and maintaining power, and aspirations for what other people had caused them to make irrational, and atrocious decisions. In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, desire and power drive characters to create chaos in the community.
In “The Crucible” by Arthur Miller was published in 1953 and is based on the witch trials in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692. Parris the reverend his niece Betty would not wake up and there was no medical cause and concluded that the girls were bewitched. Soon girls started crying and saying people's names that were haunting them and this sparked the witch hunt. Over the next eight months, twenty-seven were convicted, nine were hung, one crushed to death, and over hundred imprisoned. In Arthur Miller’s book "The Crucible" the upper class holds the power since they are of more important and thought of than people below them.
In 1692 hundreds of people were sitting in jail for being witches, but none of them were really witches. An author named Arthur Miller wrote the play The Crucible based of the true events of the Salem witch trials. In the play some girls get in trouble for dancing in the woods. They claim the witches were making them do these bad things. The girls accused a lot of people and got a lot of people of hang for being witches.
Society as a whole seeks to satisfy themselves. This may be at the expense of their peers or individuals they are associated with. Arthur Miller brilliantly displays this dark side of humanity’s side in his play The Crucible. This play is based on the Salem witch trials in the early 1690s. During the Salem witch trials over two hundred people were accused of witchcraft and twenty were executed.
“But if you have bitter jealousy and selfish ambition in your hearts, do not boast and be false to the truth. ”(Philippians 2:3) The hysteria that menacingly plagues the citizen’s minds is predominantly responsible for the cataclysmic events in Salem. Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, demonstrates these incidents in an engaging fashion, using Historical Fiction to depict the numerous complications of rapacious cupidity, and greedy misconducts. The suppressed motives relating to personal ambitions is what upsurges the vehement hysteria in Salem.
The Crucible by Arthur Miller is a dramatic play that expresses a very important message and that is how far people would go to save themselves from the hands of death. There are many characters in the Crucible who are guilty of taking innocent lives, but there are three major characters who, without a doubt, are the most at blame. The play takes place in the city of Salem, a city filled with people that would do anything to keep their reputation clean. Throughout the play, Miller is introducing multiple characters that experience changes in their decisions and negatively influence more people eventually leading up to the witch trials. The main point that the story revolves around is that people would rather lie and blame someone else instead of confessing and accepting the punishment.