John Proctor is one character in The Crucible that is a dynamic which change a bit throughout the story; for he has changed from a quiet “farm boy” to a man with huge couragement. At the beginning of the play, Proctor kept things inside of his mind, and tries to get Abagail to keep the main secret that John had since he knew that he wife, Elizabeth, would not tell what happen seven months. When John and Abagail had an affair. As the story progresses, Elizabeth was thrown into jail because she is being accused of being…
In the play, The Crucible there were many characters who stayed the same throughout the entire story, and there were others who changed. One of the characters who changed over the course of the play was John Proctor. He was an upstanding citizen in the community with one fatal flaw, his shame in sleeping with his servant, Abigail Williams. Over the course of the play, Proctor fights his guilt over what he did and faces whether or not to tell the court as he watches Abigail tear the lives of the people in the community apart. In the beginning of the play, Proctor's only goal in life was to keep his good name in the society, but he changed in an effort to save the lives of others in court. He did so when he finally told of his adultery with Abigail even though by the time he did, it was too late. While his plan to save the other people who were being tried for witchcraft had failed, he succeeded in freeing his own guilt with his confession. From that point on in the story, John Proctor was a heroic figure instead of a cowardly one like he used to be.…
Proctor is arrested on charges of witchcraft along with his wife, Elizabeth. The people that are arrested for witchcraft live if they confess, but hang if they deny the charges, even if the charges are not truthful. This plays an important part in the testing of John’s integrity later in the play. In the beginning, we find out that Proctor had an affair with the niece of the town reverend, Abigail Williams. This displays a lack of integrity for John, but nobody knows about it until later. John shows his integrity when he confesses to this affair later in the play. At the beginnig of the play, the Proctor’s want no part in the witch trials. They get dragged into the proceedings when Abigail accuses Elizabeth of hurting her with a voodoo doll. John has integegrity when he tries to save his wife from being hanged. He gets depositions from others in the town that show how good his wife was. He has Mary Warren, who was working in the Proctor house, confess that she was the one who made the doll and stuck the needle in it. This does not work though, and Mary turns on Proctor and gets him arrested. When Proctor is in jail, he shows his integrity once again. He knows that he has the…
Step into the spring of nineteen sixty two in Salem, Massachusetts, as Arthur Miller takes us on his exhilarating journey of witchcraft, accusations and religion in his play The Crucible. John Proctor made the right decision when he refused to hand over a signed confession at the court. Proctor did the right thing because he would then help his children in the future, and show his friends that he is with them. Being someone who cared for reputation he would be killed with his name living to be the man he truly was. Proctor would also be at rest from his self conflict of committing adultery with Abigail Williams.…
In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, John Proctor takes the moral high ground as a tribute to those around him- not for himself-making it the right decision. By letting himself be hanged, Proctor stays true to his character in that he protects his friends and family, reconciles with the judge within his heart, and leaves those who have done him wrong regretful of their actions.…
Men of high stature and prestige with intimidating power have always been in control of many aspects in a society. Deputy Danforth and Reverend Hale were considered to be “godly” men with power and control who followed the scriptures of their God. While attempting to be an example of a holy Christian, they became corrupt in their actions and went against biblical law to enhance their own lives. Deputy Danforth and Reverend Hale begin their oppositions towards one another when Reverend Hale experiences an epiphany of his actions, and Danforth remains condemning innocent people. In The Crucible, Arthur Miller uses rhetoric strategies…
In The Crucible Danforth, the judge, blindly believes nearly every claim he hears and rather than make an objective conclusion with presented information, he strictly relies on subjective accusations. For example, he ignores the fact that the accused women were loyal church-goers and that nearly a hundred credible people declared the women’s innocence to instead listen to teenage girls name witch after witch with no evidence at all. Said best by Proctor, “Why do you never wonder if Parris be innocent, or Abigail? Is the accuser always holy now? Were they born this morning as clean as God’s fingers” (Miller…
Proctor had committed the crime of lechery and adultery with none other than Abigail Williams; before he knew it his goodly life was irrevocably corrupted. Proctor was a sinner, a sinner not only against the moral fashion of the time, but against his own vision of decent conduct. Proctor began to view himself as the thing he hated most – a fraud and a hypocrite. He was caged by his own guilt. The emotional weight of the play rests on Proctors journey to regain his self-image, his lost goodness. It is indeed, Proctors journey from guilt to redemption which forms the central spine of The Crucible.…
Often in literature, a character's success in achieving goals depends on keeping a secret and divulging it only at the right moment, if at all. In the play, The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, the main character, John Proctor is sucked into the witchcraft trials, unable to save the town from their own hysteria, and save his reputation. As John Proctor deals with the witchcraft trials, and becomes more personally involved, he develops into a character that better understands the world and himself. John proctor achieved his goal by keeping an important secret that led to the freedom of his wife Elizabeth Proctor, saved his reputation, and led to his death.…
John Proctor is one of the most significant characters in the play and is viewed as a very prideful person. At the beginning of the book he does cheat on his wife and have an affair with the maid Abigail Williams. After this he regrets ever doing it, but while he is being accused of witchcraft by Abigail he tries to make things right while still keeping the affair a secret. Although he does confess after not too long, “A man may think God sleeps, but God sees everything, I know it now. I beg you, sir, I beg you—see her what she is. . . . She thinks to dance with me on my wife’s grave! And well she might, for I thought of her softly. God help me, I lusted, and there is a promise in such sweat. But it is a whore’s vengeance.”…
The Crucible is not only a recounting of the Salem witch trials. Behind this story, Arthor Miller most wants to say is the essentiality of humanity. The most representative thing is what people do is mostly to satisfy their own interests, so mush as willing to believe outrageous lies when those lies serve their interests. Arthur Miller develops the characters to present this theme. His depiction of Putnam couple, Reverend Parris and Judge Danforth, which could effectively prove this theme.…
Joseph Smith Jr. once said “Although I do wrong, I do not the wrongs that I am charged with doing; the wrong that I do is through the frailty of human nature, like other men, no man lives without fault.” John Proctor and The Crucible are great examples of what Joseph Smith Jr. said. “I do not wrongs that I am charged with doing… No man lives without faults,” these words are the essence of The Crucible. He has done wrong, just like all the others. They are not being charged with what they’ve done wrong though. They’re being charged with witchcraft. Though, Proctor can be arrogant, and tempered at times he tries his best to do what’s right. In The Crucible, John Proctor has done his share of wrongs, but throughout the play he makes an attempt…
Everyone around him doesn’t realize how much his pride is holding him back from the truth. Although he is trying to save Abigail Williams and himself from being shamed in the village, he is causing others to die a tragic death even if they were not at fault of witchery. The Crucible ends with John Proctor marching off to his death. By refusing to lie and confess to witchcraft, he sacrifices his life in the name of truth. At the end of the play, Proctor has in some way regained his goodness. His death is significant because in my opinion he was a coward, but also a hero. I think it is interesting that the author of the play, Arthur Miller, does not give John the last word. Instead, Reverend Hale and Elizabeth Proctor get the privilege. At the end of the play Hale states “Woman, plead with him! Woman! It is pride, it is vanity. Be his helper! What profit him to bleed? Shall the dust praise him? Shall the worms declare his truth? Go to him, take his shame away!” And Elizabeth states “He have his goodness now. God forbid I take it from him!” I don’t think he deserved to die since he eventually told the truth and he is also leaving his family and his unborn child.…
In the play The Crucible, the tragic hero John Proctor, is caught between his flaws that stop him from helping his community and that the ones that lead him to his down fall. Throughout the play, John Proctor has two choices, he can either save his life by tarnishing his name, or he can choose to die while preserving his integrity. He becomes the tragic hero by trying to help his community after a group of teenage girls start to accuse community members of witchcraft. By trying to do so, he ends up tarnishing his name after admitting to having an affair with the leader of the group, Abigail Williams. The main reason as to why he is the tragic hero is because although he was trying to do the right thing in order to save those accused of witchcraft, he refused to sacrifice his reputation, which he felt was the only thing he had left. In order to save everyone, he would have had to sign a written confession stating that he had in fact performed witchcraft, and by doing so, this would have most definitely destroyed his name in the town. He had too much pride in him to sign something that wasn’t true, and by doing so; it therefore lead to his arrest and eventually his death.…
But it isn’t until the very last scene that John realizes that he is lying to himself, and to god by signing the paper that says he is a witch. It is then that h also realizes that his reputation, and everything he has fought for disappears with the stroke of a pen. And that if he signs this paper Rebecca Nurse, Sarah Good, Tituba all died for nothing. “How may I live without my name? I have given you my soul; leave me my name!” (Act IV). In this quote Proctor has lost everything, his wife, his reputation, and his connection with god. The only piece of himself that is left is his name. It was at this moment that Proctor decided that he lived the noble and true life, and that it may not have been perfect but he would rather have died then sold his soul to the…