In the Puritan New England town of Salem, many people are trying to keep a good reputation and their names out of witchcraft. A group of girls go dancing in the forest with a slave named Tituba. While dancing, they are caught by the minister, Reverend Parris. One of the girls, Parris’s daughter Betty, falls into a coma but no one is sure if shes in a coma or this is caused by witchcraft. A crowd gathers in the Parris home while rumors of witchcraft go around town. Parris gets Reverend Hale, who is an expert on witchcraft, Parris questions Abigail Williams, the girls leader, about the events that took place in the forest. Abigail, who is Parris’s niece and ward, admits to doing nothing beyond “dancing.” Abigail doesn't want anyone to know …show more content…
Abigail played a major role in the Salem Witch trials as one of the prominent accusers. Ever since Abigail's brief affair with John Proctor, she's been out to get his wife, Elizabeth. She convinced Tituba to put a curse on Elizabeth, hoping to get rid of her and take her place at John's side. She was the servant for the Proctors, but Elizabeth had found out about the affair between Abigail and John and had fired her. Abigail wants to keep her reputation well, shes the who encouraged witchcraft in the first place. She goes around accusing everybody but herself to keep herself from being hanged. Abigail's main skill is finding people's flaws, their weaknesses, their prejudices and manipulating them to her …show more content…
Around town, his name had honor and integrity. He took pleasure in exposing hypocrisy and was respected for it. Most importantly, John Proctor respected himself. But John made the mistake of committing adultery with Abby. To make things worse, it was also lechery, as Proctor was in his forties and Abigail was just seventeen. All it took was one mistake to destroy John's most prized possession: his self-respect. This is why Johns reputation means a lot to him. He confessed to witchcraft and he must sign his name on a paper for proof to be hung on the church door. Proctor does not want to do that because he’s respected. He rather be hung than to confess.
Lastly, there is Elizabeth Proctor. Elizabeth has good qualities but are also bad qualities. She is a straightforward women but is very fishy throughout the play knowing about the affair with John and Abigail. The only sin we see her commit is when she lies in court, saying that John and Abigail's affair never happened. This is the only time she's ever lied. Unfortunately, it's really bad timing. Though she lies to protect her husband, it actually ends up getting him in more trouble. Her reputation is her being a straight forward women. But she lied and lost her reputation and gained the reputation of a
John Proctor’s excessive pride evidently led him to his downfall. In the beginning of the book, John is seen as a strong man, “in Proctor’s presence a fool felt his foolishness instantly” (Miller 20). He was seen as such a high man that he let his pride get the best of him, at first he didn't want to confess to the court about his affair with Abigail to keep his name from being blackened. When John eventually confesses to the court about his adultery with Abigail; His wife, Elizabeth, didn't know that John had already confessed, so she lied about it to keep him safe, which only made matters worse. In the end, he dies in order to keep his good name in the town.
In Puritan times, women and children held little to no power compared to men. However, Abigail Williams, a 17-year-old girl, obtains power through accusations of witchcraft. To keep her own secrets, Abigail accuses Tituba, a black slave, of witchcraft. Tituba frantically confesses to avoid being hanged, and she and Abigail list names of other women who they claim are witches. These accusations, which only grow throughout the play, give power to the accuser.
and she threatened them. If they told the truth they will regret it. At the beginning of the story the girls and Abigail were dancing in the woods. Parris discovered Betty, his niece Abigail, and Tituba, his black slave from Burbados, dancing in the forest outside of Salem at midnight. Following that morning, Reverend Samuel Parris, finds his daughter Betty in bed unconscious.
Abigail Williams, It is all her fault with her having the affair with John Proctor, It is not all John's fault that the afrie happen it's Abigail's fault that it happen. Abby is the reason that John slept with her, she seduced him into cheating on his wife with her. If Abby did not work for John and goodly Proctor want happen wouldn't of happen to the town and everything would be fine. Her Affair with John, and her love for John is a big reason why I blame her for everything that happens to the town of Salem. ”Why the Williams girl charge her”(Millar 171).
What made Abigail such a powerful antagonist was her selfishness. Abigail was involved in an affair with John Proctor which is another factor for the drama in the play. After John Proctors wife found out about the affair she was demoted from her job at their home and sent back to live so her uncle reverend Parris. This affair sets the play in motion since the reason Abigail was in the woods was to cast a spell on John’s wife Elizabeth. Abigails main motivation behind all her actions that caused such chaos in the play was to get rid of Elizabeth so she could have Ohm Proctor.
Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible in 1953. Arthur Miller wrote the play because he was inspired by McCarthyism. McCarthyism was the hunt for communists that was taken too far. In The Crucible he presented a universal message. He was comparing how communists did exist and witches did not, but yet they were both taken as serious.
Abigail defies all judgements against innocence as she is the driven evil force in The Crucible. Arthur Miller shows Abigail Williams to instinctively defend herself, as it is the humane reaction when accused of wrongdoing. It is common to tell a lie but, the intention of sabotage is a different story. Abigail had many tricks up her sleeve to manipulate the court. Her purpose to convince the town of her innocence was one of many.
Selfishness Consumes Human beings are innately driven by self-interest. They pursue goals, careers, achievements and all too often are deceitful and cheat in order to obtain them. The character Abigail in the play the Crucible is no different. The play, the Crucible, depicts the mass hysteria that overtook a town in Massachusetts during the Salem witch trials. In the midst of this fear, this panic, in the eye of the storm, lies the character of Abigail Williams.
If The Witch Don’t Fit, You Must Acquit In “The Crucible” 1953 written by Arthur Miller, wrote that hysteria in any place can ruin lives. The year is 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts. In Salem at the time it was a modest town brimming with Puritans. In the town of Salem, little secrets, jealousy and massive hysteria spread around the town.
Abigail believed that Proctor actually loved her and she waited every night for him. She was brainwashed to think he would leave his wife for her. The witchcraft accusation came from the beginning of the story when Abigail and the girls were dancing naked in the woods and chanting. She made false accusations that people in the village were worshipping the devil to cover what she had done. Many lives were taken but Abigail had no empathy for anyone who was hanged.
and so she was fired by Elizabeth. So abigail accused Elizabeth to be a witch so she would be hanged. My thesis statement is that during the salem witch trials people were accused of witchery based on personality, looks, race, and if they liked each other or not but not based on actual crime.
This sparks rumors about witchcraft within the town of Salem, as everyone looks toward the girls involved in the forest incident for an answer. Abigail Williams, Parris’s niece and another girl who danced in the forest, begins to take
John Proctor is seen as an exemplary human being in the eyes of the Puritans. When his wife, Elizabeth Proctor, is accused of witchcraft he rushes to the courts in an attempt to prove her innocence. However, in order to do that he needs to admit to an affair he had with the reverend’s niece, Abigail, who made up the lie that sent Elizabeth to jail. Proctor is unwilling to admit to adultery
Abigail Williams In the play "The Crucibles" by Arthur Miller, Abigail Williams was not such a good Puritan woman. She was a very young and gorgeous women but had sinned a lot against her Puritan religion. Abigail definitely did not make the right decisions for herself. She is an magnificent liar and tends to get others in trouble to save herself from getting caught.
Elizabeth is the victim of Abigail’s heartless actions and affair. These two women are almost complete opposites. Both characters struggle and fight through the story in their own ways. Abigail is the villain in this play.