After pilgram settlement in the modern known United States, the pilgrams endured harsh encounters like having nothing and having to build a new life, the cold winters, and the constant attcks of the indian tribes. The only way the settlements survived was threw the people working together and strictness. The town of salem war one of the most strict settlements and the one that surrvived the longest, but the town was very full of tension and rivelreas. Proctor exhibits his inner self and wilts with cowardice at the end of the story when he himself says, “I cannot mount the gibbet like a saint it is a fraud. I am not that man. My honesty is broke, Elizabeth, I am no good man. Nothing‘s spoiled by giving them this lie that were not rotten long before” (Miller 4.481). At this point, Proctor, in a cowardly manner, is trying find a way out of his hanging, by telling his wife Elizabeth that he has lied and that he is no longer a good man, and therefore if he is hanged he will die a bad man. But if he lies he will also live a bad man, and he implies that he would prefer to live in the world full of sin than go to hell and pay for his sins. …show more content…
Proctor after a long day of work comes home and has dinner, complements Elizabeth's food, and talks with Elizabeth about her day, and then Elizabeth tells proctor that abigail is the leading accuser in the court, accusing innocent people of witchcraft, and finally tells proctor to confess to the court but he cowardly says, “I know I cannot keep it. I say I will think on it“ (Miller 4.481). Knowing that many people will die the next morning, Proctor, restrains himself of going to the court to confess that Abigail is a fraud, thus he knows that if he confesses, Abigail will accuse him of adultery and his good name in the town will be
In Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible, John Proctor is the most admirable person. Though he did make a mistake by committing adultery, he is still a very honest man. During all of the hysteria, he did his best to make sure he did not feed into any of the nonsense going on. Once he was involuntarily involved in the witch trials, ultimately in the end, he still stayed true to himself. Near the end of the play, Elizabeth Proctor, John Proctor’s wife, is accused of being a witch by Abigail Williams and the other girls.
At the point when the group of onlookers is initially acquainted with Proctor in Act I, he has a discussion with Abigail. This scene uncovers to the group of onlookers that they had been as one preceding and that Proctor has submitted infidelity with Abigail. In the following Act, Proctor discovers that his better half has been blamed for witchcraft, and Abigail is the person who has made the allegation. In some way or another, Proctor realizes that it is his blame that the allegation was made. He reprimands Abigail and promises to make it right.
Proctor says to Hale “Any why not [confess] if they must hang for denying it?”. He is the only character to openly define Abigail’s performance truthfully. While the other townsfolk fearfully “part like the sea for Israel” where Abigail walks, Proctor stresses that it is in fact “vengeance [that] is walking Salem”. In the fourth act of the play, much to the relief of both Reverend Hale and Elizabeth, Proctor initially agrees to trade his good name for his life. However, he refuses to “spoil [the] good names” of the accused that refuse to confess.
Abigail has faith that Proctor loves her even when he constantly dismisses her accusations. She believes Proctor is lying to himself
Proctor brings about some valid points in the witch trials to save not just his wife but his friends wives also. Proctor is a wise man and makes a strong argument to Reverend Hale about Abigail’s and others confessions that, “There are them that will swear to anything before they’ll hang,” why not lie and confess if the other choice is death(Miller 65). First of many arguments that Proctor will bring up but this is one of the strongest that brings with it a different idea, a more reasonable solution of why all this
Proctor’s immense pride and fear of public opinion compelled him to withhold his adultery from the court, but by the end of the play he is more concerned with his personal integrity than his public reputation. He realizes his fault of having an affair with Abigail plus his stubborn attitude to maintain his pride, which caused his own downfall, but ultimately it transforms Proctor. The reversal of fortune makes Proctor's tragic flaw more apparent. When his wife Elizabeth is convicted of being a witch and in turn is taken away by the court to proceed the trial, where the end result is death, at that time Proctor admits to his affair with Abigail. Proctor reveals that he “In the proper place - where my beasts are bedded” had a pleasant time with Abigail”.
Because of this, logic behind his actions become lost since he begins executing them with a desire to reform the corruptness of his crime. Elizabeth suggests to Proctor, that by telling the court that Abigail and the other girls bewitchments are of pretense, all women who were sentenced to death would be given their lives back. He knows that telling the judges is the most rational, but he pauses before making a choice as he responds “quietly, struggling with his thought” (53). His uncertainty shows his conflicting emotion because Proctor feels he cannot accuse Abigail because his guilt will not allow him to. But he coexisting feels the priority to accuse her in order to keep Elizabeth in high spirits.
Proctor says, “In the proper place - where my beasts are bedded. On the last night of my joy, some eight months past, she used to serve me in my house sir” This act of confession shows how much he loves Elizabeth and what he’s willing to do to protect her. Abigail had told proctor that she had never seen any spirits, but she had told him when they were alone. Proctor had to confess in order to prove that abigail would want to hurt Elizabeth and she had been lying about the witches and the devil.
Does your word mean anything to you? Does what you stand for as a person mean anything even when someone tries to take it away from you? A word John Proctor lived by, integrity, which stands for honest and moral. The religious background adds to more for their moral compass so they will go to heaven and not be sinful. The author of this play Therefore, to die for the truth is better than to live a lie.
John Proctor changed significantly from the beginning of the play to the end. At first, he is a farmer outside of Salem. He cuts wood, plows, and owns a great amount of property. John is married to Elizabeth Proctor. He had an affair with Abigail Williams, who was the Proctor’s former servant.
One of the most powerful human emotions is desire. Everyone is constantly trying to fulfill their own desires. A desire or passion may be so strong it can conflict with morality. In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, Abigail Williams, is driven to go against her moral duty and pursue John Proctor. She will stop at nothing to see her plan through.
Published in 1952, during a period of cold war tensions, which culminated in the ideological witch trials of the mcarthy era in America; The crucible by Arthure miller is set in 1692 during the witch trials in salem massachusetts. The author has used allegory to position the reader to draw parrelels betweeen the to time periods and critisize the persecution that occured in both eras. One of the main themes that Miller has used to portray this viewpoint is the representation of personal integrity. Integrity is the quality of having strong moral pronciples. This is acheived through strongly contrasted characterisation of characters such as Abigail williams and and Rebecca Nurse, aswell as the inclusion of textual features such as irony, symbolism
In the Puritan village of Salem, a man 's reputation is very important. Throughout the play, John Proctor is very worried about his reputation and his ‘name,’ “Because it is my name … How may I live without
In The Crucible, the protagonist John Proctor was. In the town of Salem, in 1692, a group of young ladies by the names of Betty Williams, Abigail Williams and Tituba were found dancing in the forest naked by Reverend Parris, Abigail’s’ uncle. Reverend Parris assumed that they were participating in witchcraft. This idea of witchcraft spread through the city of Salem and the citizens began accusing each other of being witches. This started a series of court cases known as the Salem Witch Trials.
Likewise, when Elizabeth is brought before Danforth to verify Proctor’s confession, she lies to protect her husband, whom she refers to as a “goodly man,” from suspicion (Miller, 113). The affair may have caused Elizabeth to doubt Proctor but both parties still care deeply for each other and try to protect each other from harm. Even in his last moments, Proctor’s last words- “Show honor now, show a stony heart and sink them with it!”- were directed toward Elizabeth and were full of love and care (Miller, 144). Proctor may have sinned but his regret over his affair with Abigail and the trouble he had brought upon his wife justifies his