Throughout the story, Proctor doesn’t care about other peoples opinion until his wife is accused of witchcraft by his ex-mistress Abigail. He makes the difficult…
Passion and responsibility are key factors that compose John Proctor’s mannerism. His actions throughout the play give a clear image of his goodness and desire to be recognized as a good man, despite his wrong doings. As a major character in the play, John adventures through difficult times affecting his future actions. Not only does he have to deal with his affair with Abigail, but he must also face his confession in court and risk ruining his name. His passion for following the Puritan beliefs and staying true to who he is allows him to take responsibility for his mistakes and confesses to the crime although he is unable to forgive himself.…
He becomes selfless and sacrifices his reputation and his life to save everyone else in the court by the end of the Crucible. John Proctor said "You will not judge me more, Elizabeth. I have good reason to think before I charge fraud on Abigail. And I will think on it. Let you look to your own improvement before you go to judge your own husband anymore. I have forget Abigail" (pg. 918.) In the beginning of the book, he knew he was going to hurt his neighbors from hiding what he did with Abigail, but he was so afraid about the citizens of Salem find out about his affair. John was afraid to tell the judges about his affair with Abigail because Abigail is going to ruin his reputation by charge lechery. John proctor said " I speak my own sins; I cannot judge another." (Pg. 968.) John Proctor tried to speak his own sins, confess he saw the witches to survive, and ask forgiveness for Elizabeth because it will save the others. John Proctor signed a written confession that will be hung on the courthouse door. He knew that will ruin his name and reputation in the society, but he sacrificed himself to save people who are in the prison.…
John Proctor, one of the main characters in The Crucible, is remorseful, candid, and industrious. Arthur Miller created John Proctor to be a likeable character. He is a flawed character who tries to make what he did wrong, right. Even though John and Elizabeth Proctor are still having a hard time dealing with his mistake, the reader can still recognize that he is a personable man.…
The definition of crucible is a severe test or trial. Arthur Miller skillfully uses this word to describe the 16th century, Salem inspired, witch trial based play, The Crucible. Handling the chaos of the courts in Salem became an accomplishment in its self. The characters also endured a test of strength by deciphering between what is best for themselves or their friends. Three characters that undergo many tests of emotional strength and stability in this play are John Proctor, the protagonist, Elizabeth whom is John’s upright and composed wife, and Reverend Hale the supernatural expert with a vendetta against witches.…
Several leading characters in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible exhibit qualities of pride and arrogance. Hale and Danforth, two men of considerable authority, convey Miller’s message, and criticism of pride. These two characters show that pride does not shine light on the truth, but rather turns just judgment away from it. Their pride ultimately dictates the decisions of the Salem witch trials, which leads to the deaths of hundreds of innocents.…
John Proctor was a leading figure of the Salem community during The Crucible. “He was the kind of man- powerful of body, even tempered, and not easily led- who cannot refuse support to partisans without drawing their deepest resentment. In Proctor’s presence a fool felt his foolishness instantly...” (1269). Proctor served as a voice of reason and when he agreed with something, it…
The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, is a partially fictitious rendering of the colonial witch trials that took place in Salem, Massachusetts. The Puritanical society creates characters of strong moral compasses, but who also take the Devil as seriously as they take God. All sins are severely punished and supernatural reports and behavior are not taken lightly. The play begins with Reverend Parris speaking about his discovery of his niece, daughter, and other village girls dancing in the woods over a fire. His daughter, Betty, has mysteriously fallen ill since the dancing was discovered. This occurrence sparks rumors of witchcraft around the village. Parris’ niece, Abigail, obsessed with her…
Even though he knows that Elizabeth is saved because of her pregnancy, he still continues to fight for the other women that are charged with the witchcraft issue. He supports fairness. All his actions were made to save many people from the witchhunt. He pays it with his own life, a symbol of goodness. John Proctor's decision to die is very important. He had to choose between dying and saving a whole society. John Proctor was willing to die than damn all the others. “You use not use me! I am no Sarah Good or Tituba, I am John Proctor! You will not use me! It is no part of salvation that you should use me! (Miller 62).” This statement shows the sense of pride that John still withholds in himself. John Proctor becomes so proud that he shocks the whole counsel by ripping the confession up in front of their faces. John Proctor then states the following: “Because it is my name! Because I cannot have another in my life! Because I lie and sign myself to lies! Because I am not worth the dust on the feet of them that hang! How may I live without my name? I have given you my soul; leave me my name! (Miller 143-144).” He always wanted to keep his name clean. He took the right decision as it also allowed him to compensate his sin with Abigail. John Proctor wanted to protect the truth, even if he has to pay with his own…
By examining the characters Abigail Williams, John Proctor, and Elizabeth Proctor, one can see that there are different types of pride. In the play Crucible, Abigail was the selfish, self centered, and a compulsive liar type of character, Abigail main concern was to get John Proctor. And to make Elizabeth Proctor mad, she was gifted…
John Proctor, another character of the book, was a very confident yet sickening man when he had an affair with Abby, he hated what he did and tried to avoid her. He did have a wife named Elizabeth Proctor who was a nice woman and did know about the affair they had but didn't do much about it. In the end of the book, they are speaking to each other when Proctor says, “I will confess to them.”(Miller. 135). That is one of the most bravest things to do in the 1600's because they all are very scared to confess during this time when you have people who are strictly in the hands of God. Not too much further in the book is why John Proctor is one of the best characters in the book, he decides to stand up for himself when he tells Danforth, another character of the book, “I can! And there's your first marvel, that I can. You have made your magic now, for now I do think I see some shred of goodness in John Proctor. Not enough to weave a banner with, but white enough to it from such dogs.” (Miller. 144). This is one of the most bravest scenes in history because John Proctor is showing that he is not cursed by any witch and keeps trying to tell Danforth that he is not a witch at all. John Proctor stood up for himself, everyone in the book did not try to stand up for their opinion at all, the people just said that they were not cursed by a witch at all, and then ended up…
One of the points in The Crucible, by Arthur Miller is excessive pride. You may be wondering exactly what this means. Excessive pride means to be overly proud of one whether it’s regarding their importance, superiority, conduct, and what oneself has done. In this play a group of girls go into the woods to do witchcraft. But when they are caught, they make an excuse and say the devil made them. Then they start telling everyone that the devil has been consorting with other people in the village. The girls name random people in town, because they don’t want to get in trouble and put the blame on others. In result twenty innocent people die because they were found guilty, due to the false accusations made by the group of girls. A few of the main characters in the play who possess excessive pride are Reverend Hale, Elizabeth proctor, and John proctor.…
John Proctor lost his life because he stayed true to his morals by not lying about using witchcraft. John would not let anybody take his pride. A man is not a man if he goes everyday regretting that he had lied. John Proctor was the type of man who would wake up every morning regretting that he had lied just so he could live. Proctor’s wife Elizabeth knows her husband better than anyone in the town of Salem. As Hale is mad that Proctor ripped the paper, Elizabeth explains to Hale that, “He have his goodness now. God forbid I take it from him” (4,784). She tells Hale that no one can take John’s pride from him.…
A crucible is a severe test as of patience or belief, a trial. Arthur Miller’s play The Crucible is a journey through the trials of many townspeople caused by suspicions of witchcraft. As the story progresses, people’s words and actions cause Reverend John Hale to change his views on whether the people prosecuted were guilty or innocent of witchcraft. As numerous events and their consequences unfold, they cause Hale to rethink his initial views on witchcraft and to be persuaded of the innocence of those convicted in Salem.…
He changes his entire view on life because of how insane the witch trials are. Being a Reverend, religion is quite important to Hale, and it is not easy to give up everything your life revolves around. No matter what the religiously right thing is, Hale does the morally right thing. Hale goes against everything the Puritan religion believed in because he saw that hanging innocent people was morally wrong. Miller writes an amazing foreword of Hale in the beginning of The Crucible, which gives an understanding to the concept of sinning for a greater good. “It is as impossible for most men to conceive of a morality without sin as of an earth without “sky.” The concept of unity, in which positive and negative are attributes of the same force, in which good and evil are relative, ever-changing, and always joined to the same phenomenon- such a concept is still reserved to the physical sciences and to the few who have grasped the history of the ideas” (Miller 33-34). Everyone sins, but not everyone sins for the right reason. Hale sins for the right reason. He could have saved lives and to him, that was less of a sin to God then giving your life away because of an accusation. Reverend Hale did the morally just thing and sinned for all the right…