This scene is important to both the text of the play and the film adaptation, and serves similar purposes in both. For example, it signifies the rising action of the film as it includes the first of many false accusations and confessions. In addition to the importance this scene has to the structure of the play, it is also a pivotal scene for both Tituba and Abigail. For Tituba, this scene is her brief rise to power. Her confession ensures the town’s trust in her, making her arguably the most powerful member of Salem. However, Abigail sees not only the power that Tituba gains through her confession, but also the potential that she herself may have to influence the town. In general, this scene conveys the leverage over other members of Salem…
When tituba confessed to what the girls were actually doing in the woods in Act I, Abigail sees her confession as a threat to the lies. Consequentially, she plans to cover herself and the other girls with a mask of fidelity. Childish behavior consumes maturity when an individual is presented with the ability of power. When the girls’ ordeal becomes public, it’s shown how they attempt to save their lives and reputation from entanglement with their own altercations. Abigail’s power was obtained and abused using her manipulation to save her self . Author Arthur miller gives us these examples to show us how power in certain people can be destructive and dangerous. Abigails childish jealousy got the best of her[john Proctor] “aye, but we did not... do you look for whippin?”denies any association with abigail.(Miller 22) She foolishly accuses Proctors wife Elizabeth of witchcraft just to get her out of the way of[abigail] being with Proctor. Abigail used the trials for a personal vendetta and saw a way to get exactly what she wants, without the consequences of the society they lived in. Power was the main issue in the society and…
Tituba was accused falsely just like Michael Blair. Just because she was black and spoke a different language she was accused of something she didn’t even do. The only way for her to live was if she confessed but she still didn’t do it. She was beat and wiped until she said she did it (The Crucible). She looked different and lived in something people have never seen. She was also there during the crime but she didn’t do it. Just because she was there she was accused instantly because she was so different from everyone else. Abigail went around accusing everyone she could just so she didn’t get in any trouble.…
In the play, Abigail is only seventeen when the affair occurs. Being a young and naive girl, she mistakes the actions for love and expects John to leave his wife. When he rejects her, she takes matters into her own hands and tried to get rid of Elizabeth Proctor by using Tituba’s magic. When that fails, she blames Elizabeth and others in the town for using witchcraft. This only backfires because John becomes desperate to save his wife. Also, Abigail takes advantage of her friends and does not use witchcraft but still manages to control them. They all support and testify to Abigail’s claim. The play revolves around Abigail doing anything for his attention including being responsible for the death of many. Even though she is young, she proves she is smart enough to manipulate and bend a whole town at her will, control her friends and betray her only family all in the name of her love for John Proctor. Overall, Abigail portrays the same perseverance Elizabeth does for the one they love and are strong minded women refuse to…
When Tituba confesses this starts a new chapter where many women start to accuse each other. While Parris was greedy for his reputation, Thomas Putnam was quite greedy over land. Thomas Putnam is a very wealthy farmer, who shows how he would do whatever he could to get more land for his farm. He knew that more land and a bigger farm meant more money. People that were accused would give up their land rights, that land would be put up for sale. With Putnam being so rich he would always purchase the land, this was the law “If Jacobs hangs for a witch he forfeit up his property - that's…
Parris ' slave from Barbados, Tituba was with the girls when they danced and attempted to conjure the spirits of Ann Putnam 's dead children. She is the first person accused of witchcraft and…
In January of 1962 several adolescent girls became fascinated by Tituba's, the servant of Reverend Samuel Parris of Salem Village, stories of natural magic and island culture. Two of the girls were related to Samuel Parris, Abigail Williams and Betty Parris, while others were children of his supporters. It is said that the girls were conjuring spirits and fell ill. William Griggs, the village doctor, was called in when they failed to improve. He diagnosed that Abigail and Betty had been bewitched, thus starting the Salem Witch trials. Afraid of being accused of witchcraft the girls subsequently named the people who supposedly bewitched them. Anyone who experienced any loss believed the outrageous accusations of the hysterical girls as confirmation of what they already suspected.…
Tituba being a slave for Parris could be easily blamed for his daughter not waking.. Tituba cares for the girls like betty by saying things like “I love me Betty!”(1232). With this quote she shows that she is a caretaker and the dancing in the forest was not meant for harm but a good time loves the girls. Tituba is so easily turned against since she’s just a slave. This is Tituba’s Caretaker identity how she looks after the girls and feels like she is close with them. While Abigail is being interrogated by Reverend Hale she uses an Out and Out lie because she says first it's Tituba’s fault and that she brainwashed her, so Tituba being betrayed by one of the girls she doesn't know how to respond since her identity is a Caretaker and she's also a slave. Tituba says things like “ You beg me to conjure! She beg me make charm” and, “Why you say that, Abby”(1250). Since Tituba is victimized by the ones she loves she can only lie to escape her…
The tragic ending in, “The Crucible,” by, Arthur Miller, is inevitable due to cause and affect scenarios throughout the drama: Tituba blaming the devil, Marry Warren giving Elizabeth Proctor a poppet, and John Proctor having an affair with Abigail Williams. In the beginning of the play Tituba had gone with Abigail and the girls in the forest which lead to them getting caught by Reverend Hale. Being questioned this had lead Tituba to blame the devil for her actions and because of that she made her self vulnerable to Abby who then began to make false accusations of innocent white ladies, leading to the witch hunt. Before the witch trials John Proctor had an affair with Abby and because of that she was able to manipulate him in the court and make false statements about his wife because she desired John and he wanted nothing but Elizabeth. Abby was jealous of Elizabeth and would do anything to make her go away. In court Mary Warren had sewn Elizabeth Proctor a poppet for her expected child and Abby had told Marry to put a needle in the poppet. One night while Abigail was eating dinner she “magically” got stabbed with a needle in her stomach saying it was Elizabeth Proctor’s spirit who did it. Because Abby said it was Elizabeth’s spirit the two town marshals, Cheever and Herrick, had come to the proctor residence to come arrest Elizabeth with charges of witchcraft for using voodoo dolls with conspiracy with the…
John Proctor is a tragic hero in the efforts to save his wife’s life but sacrifices his life to preserving his pride, dignity, and truth; dying as a man with many flaws but a good man in the eyes of God. John Proctor is the common man who's making an honest living as a farmer in the Puritan town of Salem, Massachusetts. Many describe him as a virtuous, stern man who speaks his mind and is well-respected. He is a man of integrity; a harsh-tongued man whose lust led him to an affair with Abigail Williams, his former servant. This leaves a strain in his marriage and he can’t seem to forgive himself. When introduced to the story, John Proctor is a passive protagonist who does nothing to affect the main plot of the story. During this time, he is motivated by staying out of the witch hunt hysteria to save himself and his reputation. John says to Elizabeth, “I’ll think on it”(Miller, 27); John is trying to avoid getting involved in the witch hunt. His self-serving desire to be silent leads many innocent people to their deaths, leaving those responsible unaccountable. It is until Elizabeth is arrested for “witchcraft” he get involved in proving her innocence and exposing the…
Painting is a way of using art in order to manifest expressions with colors and figures. Every painter adopts a different way of painting. Mary Cassatt and Georgia O’Keeffe are two women American painters whose work are very different. The most notable differences between them are their style, subject matter and influences.…
In the beginning of the play, Reverend Hale is a pompous and knowledgeable man who seeks to end any type of witchcraft in Salem. In Act 1, “His goal is light, goodness, and it’s preservation” (Miller 30). This gives the reader the impression that Hale has trained to be the best witch hunter ever, and his trip to Salem is his opportunity to test his new skills. His belief in witches is soo powerful he tells the people of Salem, “No man may longer doubt the powers of the dark gathered in monstrous attack upon this village”(Miller 64). He even goes as far as to falsely accuse Tituba of witchcraft. Violence is the first action used on Tituba, rather than looking for evidence against her, Hale decides to listen to Abigail’s claim with no regrard for Tituba’s side of the story. Hale is so blinded by the idea of witches that he does not consider the possibility that it may not be a supernatural force that is causing havoc in Salem.…
Tituba accuses a few women of witchery because of the fear from being executed. Her fear of death causes her to falsely claim she compacted with the Devil and wants to be good now. The reverends are threatening Tituba with an execution because Abigail accuses her of witchcraft. Tituba says, “(Frightened by the coming process). Mister Reverend, I do believe somebody else be witchin’ these children” (188). She is not practicing sorcery on the children and tries to put the blame away from her. She truthfully explains that she doesn’t know of this, but the reverends still threaten with death. When she is frightened, she quickly explains that it isn’t her and someone accused her. Although a slave, she…
It is colonial Salem, Massachusetts, a Puritan run society. In a room, Reverend Parris is beside his "ill" daughter Betty and he is suspicious of his niece, Abigail Williams. Abigail and other girls were caught dancing in the woods while having a ceremony, which in this time is unholy. At random, characters begin to arrive to his house to check up on the girl and talk about the rumors going throughout Salem of his daughter's condition. Reverend Hale arrived and he uses his holy powers to make Tituba confess of doing Devil's work. Soon after Betty and Abigail accuse people of witchcraft and the whole town is now in a hysteria. Meanwhile, Proctor, the ex-lover of Abigail Williams, is trying to save his wife from being accused of witchcraft and vengeful Abigail. With the help of a group of girls, Abigail is able to pull off the act of being hurt by the accused witches. Innocent people are convicted and put to death, and John Proctor decides its his duty to help these people.…
Tituba description of how Reverend Parris extracted her confession is depicted in Robert Calef’s book, More Wonders of the Invisible World, and proceeds as follows, “…her master did beat her … to make her confess and accuse (such as he called) her sister witches, and that whatsoever said by way of confessing or accusing others was the effect of such usage; her master refused to pay her [prison] fees, unless she would stand to what she had said.” It was with this coerced confession, a confession that would hold no ground in a modern legal system, that the case was made against an easy scapegoat,…