John Proctor demonstrates that he is a good man with the way that he judges himself. Proctor can’t forgive himself for having an affair. Proctor shows that he regrets the affair by telling Abigail, “I will cut off my hand before I’ll ever reach for you again” (Act I.451-452). After Elizabeth is arrested, Proctor can’t forgive himself for not telling the court that Abigail…
After John Proctor has an affair with Abigail Williams, he is filled with guilt and he does not have the self-respect to forgive himself for what he had done. He is bothered with his disgrace, only because he knows in his heart the one day he will have to confess to his sins and ruin his reputation. There was a trial in court for all the witchcraft going on in Salem. His wife (Elizabeth) is being tried for witchcraft. She was accused by…
Before the Salem witch trials start, John Proctor is already suffering from an internal conflict when he commits adultery. He is unable to forgive himself and wholeheartedly believes that God and his wife Elizabeth will never see him the same way. To make matters even worse he must reveal his horrible acts to save his wife from being killed…
In the Proctor household, there is so much tension between Elizabeth Proctor, Proctor’s wife, and John Proctor. Proctor has committed adultery with a teenage servant, Abigail Williams. Although Abigail has been gone for 7 months, Elizabeth still cannot trust Proctor. Proctor is constantly trying to please his wife, knowing full well Elizabeth is still upset. Proctor finally had…
Like her husband, Elizabeth has some descriptive terms about her tone; like John Proctor she was bitter during Act II because she has been fooled because of John Proctor's adultery. Then she becomes more compassionate and forgiving because John is on the brink of death in Act III. In the beginning of Act II, Elizabeth is more suspicious of John continuing her sins as she asks” what keeps you so late? It is almost dark”(1266). She was so quick to assume that John Proctor was doing something other than what he was actually doing, providing food for the family. She is a loyal wife that she would go as far as to lie to the court to keep John alive; she does this as he testifies “My husband is a good and righteous man. He is never drunk as some are … but always at his work”(). Although it is a sin this is also a sense of her Redemption because she has forgiven her past adultering husband. And finally in Act IV, when Elizabeth Proctor and John Proctor meet for the last time, she forgives him and blames the unsettled feeling on the household on herself; she goes on to say “John, I counted myself so plain, so poorly made, no honest love could come to me! It were a cold house I kept”(). As John became hysterical, Elizabeth wanted to forgive him and just blames herself in the same manner because she feel so bad and John’s about to die and that leads to try to rectify the situation and the mental pain. Miller perfects the embodiment of a couple who, under all of the issues they have, love each other more than anything in the…
Initially, she is scorned by her husband’s lechery and as a result he resolves to “please her” which shows repentance for his actions, his ‘sin’ and his desire to not wrong his wife in such a way again. Her perseverance causes Proctor to confess to Hale that “the children’s sickness had nought to do with witchcraft” which leads to his admission “I have known her” [Abigail]. He publicises his wrong-doing in an attempt to make amends for his mistakes and earn the forgiveness of Elizabeth. He initially says “I have been thinking I would confess to them” before realising this is wrong – he says in Act 2 “your spirit twists around the single error of my life and I will never tear it free” and yet as he comes to terms with the fact he is “no good man” and refuses to give a false confession in order to save his neck he earns his “goodness”. By the end of the Crucible he has been purged from his wrong doing, and in turn his wife Elizabeth has been purged of her cold nature and inability to forgive John for this “single error”. Although their marriage has been through hell and back, Elizabeth and John are consoled as the play concludes and the audience believes that wrongs have been set…
Elizabeth Proctor is a very developmental woman who during her most arousing epochs, has her moments in which she refuses to let go of the past, and proceed with her life as she begins to understand the clear motives of the hysteria, she flourishes in the aspect of love, care, and faith. She is a pure and authentic person who believes in all honesty and stays true to herself. When her husband John Proctor says “ Spare Me! You forget nothing and forgive nothing. Learn charity, woman. I have not moved from there to there, without I think to please you, and still an everlasting funeral marches around your heart,”(Miller 52) he refers to her empathy and her benevolence, which is stingy and frigid. She begins to realize that in her hardest moments her husband John Proctor is the person who has been there to accommodate her and he has not refused to be by…
" You'll tear it free when you come to know that I will be your only wife, or no wife at all! She has an arrow in you yet, John Proctor, and you know it well" (The Crucible, 1275). She is telling him that he can e loyal or will ever nothing to her. Elizabeth is not going to deal with a cheater, so she tells Proctor he can be only hers or not hers at all. " My husband is a goodly man, sir" (The Crucible, 1149). Elizabeth loves her husband and she understands he is upset about what he has done. Elizabeth tells Mr. Hale that he has messed up. Elizabeth loves and knows Proctor is sorry, so she is doing anything to make sure he is not in trouble with the court. Although in the end he ends up dying instead of putting his wrongs out for everyone to see. This is a hard choices, but Elizabeth knows she has to stay strong for herslef and her…
My name is John Proctor, I consider myself to be a rebellious, logical, noble, and handsome young man. Today I am here to talk about my story, a story that changed my life and one that I learned from and never forget. I shall start by stating the truth that I have a good reputation in my village and married to Elizabeth Proctor, she is my wife in which I would cut my hand off to reach out to her. I am an angel of this world and I do no – wrong, but I am caught with one major flaw of my own, which is the affair I had with my servant of the house, the maid if I must say, Abigail Williams, while I was married. It was the fault of my own, a nonsensical, brainless decision on my part.…
He carries around the burden of the sins he has committed and does not seem to have the ability to forgive himself. So in addition to the looming accusations of witchcraft in the city of Salem, John Proctor is also dealing with the weight of the sins he’s committed. Proctor’s own guilt over the situation leads him to blame his wife, Elizabeth, for the affair. In the play, Proctor tells Elizabeth “You forget nothin’ and forgive nothin’” and that there is “an everlasting funeral” that marches around her heart. (Act II, pg. 852) He blames Elizabeth for not forgiving him even though he has done everything to make up for it. His guilt is still there and he tries to push it down, but when Reverend Hale comes to their home to question them it is obvious he feels guilty when he cannot name all the Ten Commandments. The one he leaves out is the one that states, “Thou shalt not commit…
Proctor, at the beginning of the play, is quite average in his life as a well-respected farmer in Salem. He is not exuberantly rich nor exceedingly poor, but he possesses the means by which he is to provide for his wife and children as do most people in Salem; however, what separates him from the rest of the villagers is the affair that he has with Abigail Williams (Miller 1.3). Through his poor discernment and erroneous judgement, Proctor engenders his downfall. Immediately after his affair, Proctor tries to right himself and put his sin out of his mind, indicating that Proctor does, indeed, possess a more positive and virtuous side in his persona. When he is approached by Abigail, alone together in a room, Proctor says to her, “Abby, I may think of you softly from time to time. But I will cut off my hand before I’ll ever reach for you again. Wipe it out of mind. We never touched, Abby” (Miller 1.3). Although he has inherent character flaws, Proctor tries to live honorably and to restore his integrity. He is so consumed by this sin that he is unable to reconcile with himself for months after it. His flaw was not his inability to stay true to his wife, Elizabeth, but rather his inability to forgive himself for his faults and to expose both himself and Abigail to Salem as sinners. This flaw allows Abigail to create a scheme to get Proctor to herself and is the primary reason that the witch trials had to occur, bringing with them hysteria and the suffering and persecution of the innocent, as well as the downfall of John Proctor and multiple other respected…
Although he struggles to make a final decision whether to sign his confession or not, Proctor chooses to die while he still believes he is partly righteous. When John Proctor says, “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 keep it from such dogs” (133). He demonstrates his strength to stick up for himself. John Proctor recognizes that people like Danforth are manipulative because they abuse their power. He knows he has enough morality to “keep it from such dogs”. Proctor is a brave man since he knows it is better to die with honor than live as a coward. Proctor takes his demise as a real man and finally forgives himself. Just before Proctor leaves to be hung, Elizabeth shows how she admires her husband for his strength in his tragic downfall because she believes “He ha[s] his goodness now and [would never] take it from him!” (134). Of course Elizabeth wants her husband to live, but she understands Proctor. She highly respects his bravery in court glad that he has given himself a second chance. She is pleased he feels he is “good” and worthy to hang beside people like Rebecca…
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.…
Looking around too all the different ethnicities that can be found in this world, two of those most interesting cultures would have to be the Greeks and the Maya. The ancient Greek and Mayan civilizations have many similar characteristics but they also have many differences. The Mayan’s are an indigenous Mesoamerican culture found in present day South America. As where the Greeks are an ethnicity group native to Greece.…
How many of you went to a school that participated in the D.A.R.E. program? According to a report by the General Accounting Office, the "non-partisan investigative arm of the U.S. Congress", the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program commonly known as D.A.R.E is ineffective and "The six long-term evaluations of the D.A.R.E. elementary school curriculum that we reviewed found no significant differences in illicit drug use between students who received D.A.R.E. in the fifth or sixth grade (the intervention group) and students who did not (the control group)." This is just one example of the millions of dollars wasted on the government 's war on drugs. In my opinion, and those of many others, the entire "drug war" is a huge waste of money and valuable human resources. And where marijuana is concerned, there has been no substantial evidence that its prohibition has had any conclusive effect at all. The current drug policy on marijuana is not only ineffective but harmful to not only yourselves, but society as a whole. The criminalization of marijuana is not the solution; it 's part of the problem.…