At the beginning of chapter 5, Jo is in her exercise clothes, and Meg can not believe that Jo decides to go out on such a cold, wet day. Jo heads over to her neighbor’s house, the Laurences. Ever since the New Year’s Party, Jo has wanted to talk with Laurie. To get his attention, she throws a snowball at his window. Laurie pokes his head out and explains that he is very sick and very bored, so he can not go outside.…
To begin, Mary Warren is initially a poor treated servant in the Proctor household who is very timid, demure and easily…
Changes. Everyone goes through many different changes in their lives. In The Crucible, written by Arther Miller, many of the characters go through changes, such as Elizabeth Proctor. The Crucible actually means a severe test or trial. Elizabeth is one of the characters in the story who goes through a small test of faith and honesty.…
11.a. Speaker: The speaker is John Proctor, who is a local farmer and the husband of Elizabeth Proctor.…
10. What do we learn from the conversation that Mercy, Abigail, and Mary Warren have while alone?…
Mary Warren in “The Crucible” is largely driven by fear throughout the story, more specifically her fear of not being accepted. Throughout the book, we can see that she wants to be accepted by whoever has the most power over her life at the time. First Abigail, then later she desires acceptance and forgiveness from Elizabeth Proctor, and then finally Abigail again.…
Mary Warren, a character in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, is a submissive character that yields to the greater authority in the play. The true higher authority, the ones in charge, changes in the play, and therefore it seems as if Mary changes in the play as well, but in the end she remains a static character that sides with those in power, even if she doesn’t truly want to. Her subservience ot the highest power makes her actions seem reprehensible, however initially she is also a well intentioned individual who tries to do right, but ultimately does wrong due to her weakness of character. To be brief, Mary Warren is a submissive individual that yields to authority due to her weak character, and ultimately causes harm on others, despite being…
The Crucible is a study in how mass hysteria can quickly get out of control and become very harmful if not deadly. Mary Warren is a catalytic character in The Crucible as she is both a mirror and a foil for many characters, and her ever changing bravery, or lack thereof, is what ushers the story along. Mary is a very malleable character. At first, she is very obedient towards her employer, John Proctor, then very submissive towards the brutal character of Abigail. She enjoys the respect she receives from being an official of the court, and defying Proctor. After Goody Proctor is accused, she agrees to reveal Abigail to the court but once she is swept up in the hysteria Mary yet again shifts her allegiance back to Abigail leading to John Proctor’s…
but she also does not want to do it because she’s worried about herself. At the beginning of the play, Mary Warren was this nice little girl who would probably do as you say. She’s this likable little girl and then as you keep getting to know her, you come to find out that she’s a big scary…
Abigail Williams is a deranged character throughout the play. Towards the end she gets even worse. It all starts out because she’s in love with John Proctor from whom she had an affair with. She does everything she does to try to get John to be with her. One night when Tituba and the other girls went out in the woods to dance around a fire Abby brought a chicken. She drank the chicken’s blood and sacrificed it into the fire in hope that Elizabeth proctor would die. When Betty wouldn’t wake up from her sleep while John came to visit her, so then Abby tried to make her move with him. John stated that he didn’t want her no more towards Abby. Once the town starts to talk of witchcraft Abby blames Tituba for the whole thing. She explains that Tituba made all the girls go out into the woods and dance. Abby will do anything to keep herself out of the blame.…
Some of the characters in The Crucible stay the same but a few of them change. To me the characters who changed are Mary Warren, John Proctor, Elizabeth, and Rebecca Nurse. They change from the beginning towards the end of the play, starting out to be innocent but then each of those characters start to change who they are.…
Satan’s soliloquy in Book 4 develops his character through self-reflection, elucidating his many complex characteristics and emotions. While Satan is portrayed as a rather humane protagonist thus far, his motives, beliefs, and fears are not explained and thus, only allowed for a one-dimensional interpretation. During Satan’s soliloquy in Book 4, however, he finally reflects upon himself, revealing his motives, fears, and doubts and thus, enriching his character.…
There are many characters that Arthur Miller has written about in The Crucible that have many meaning. Mary Warren is a character of importance and shows examples of a lesson that many people need to learn today. Demonstrating qualities of being a coward, fearful, and a very dishonest, the character of Mary Warren is developed by Arthur Miller in order to support lesson that many people need to learn today that if we do not learn from the past that history will repeat itself.…
One of the main characters of the play The Crucible, Abigail Williams, is the most spiteful and least complex character throughout the entire play. She is the villain of the play, even more than Parris or Danforth. She is on the lower end of the social hierarchy; the only people below her were slaves like Tituba. Abigail Williams possess wicked character traits that give her a negative perception. She is a jezebel figure who lacks feelings, an immoral character who lacks ethics and a manipulative person who lacks a conscience.…
Learning and speaking the truth are not always the easiest things to accept. In The Crucible accepting the truth is one of the main issues that occur throughout the play. Though everybody now knows that most or all depending on what the reader wants to believe were not witches, and consequently died for something they never did. Many characters lie throughout the play for their own reasons some to due with land while the others for more personal reasons. The death of many were caused by the others failing to accept the truth.…