Abigail Williams, a misfit archetype from the 17th century, has experiences and qualities that can be associated with the 20th and 21st centuries. Throughout this time, people have done things to get another person, who happens to be some type of enemy, into trouble. An example of this during the 20th century were the McCarthy Trials. During this time, Americas were accusing each other of being Communist spies who were trying to gather information to give back to Russia. Neighbors, friends, and family who didn't like each other were accusing and being accused. The McCarthy trials can be related to Abigail Williams…
She was then taken in by Reverend Parris, her uncle, and was able to find employment in the Proctor household, which led to the development of the conflict in The Crucible. Abigail was sent away from the Proctor household after Elizabeth found out about the lecherous acts between Abigail and John Proctor. The build up of experiences, from the murder of her parents up until the first act probably led her to the current disposition she is in during the play. She easily prioritizes her own desires at the expense of others, even going to the extent of cursing Elizabeth Proctor during prior to the first act and, later on, blaming Elizabeth Proctor for practicing witchcraft. Abigail Williams does not seem to be bound by moral standards, as seen in her continuing active participation in the witch hunt and conviction of a number of Salem's citizens. Her knack for mischief develops further towards the third act, when Mary Warren came forward with the claim that she had lied about being afflicted by supernatural forces. This statement could have displaced the previous accusations that Abigail and her friends had given in the past. Abigail, recognizing the possibility of being imprisoned for deceiving the court, started acting as if Mary Warren had cast her spirit on Abigail and her friends. Mischief turned into vengeance at this point, when the girls were too deep into their lie that self-preservation and hatred towards those endangering that self-preservation fueled their…
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.…
In times of turmoil, various individuals succumb to their darkest impulses showing no evidence of humanity. They take the opportunity to exploit the desperate and grieving in situations of chaos to indulge their own selfish desires which is often fuelled with hatred and revenge. Abigail Williams, the villain of the play ‘The crucible’ lies and manipulates the entire town of Salem sending nineteen innocent people to their deaths. William’s longing for power and love overtakes her conscience and ability to respond humanely, hence, it defines her true character. Armed with roving ambition, Abigail Williams tore down the very fabric that constituted humanity causing the destruction of Salem. Instead of dealing with her interpersonal conflict with integrity and righteousness she responded with the cruellest nature by taking revenge on those who was in her way of achieving what she desired. Her deep lust for love and her immense hatred from rejection caused her inner characteristics to be exposed releasing a primitive character underneath. Consequently it was her inability to maintain her moral and rational strength after being disparaged for her affair that ignited and divulge her true egocentric…
In the novel of The Crucible, written by Authur Miller Abigail committed the greatest crimes. Abigail destroyed the reputations of many and killed much of her surrounding society. Her power lied in the fact that judges believed her, making all those women who fell victim to her scapegoats. She is the one who triggers off a sense of hate in the play. She tempts John Proctor into sexual activity, and to escape punishment for dancing, she deflects the actions and blames them on someone else, and does not care how many lives she ruins. “ ABIGAIL: give me a soft word, John. A soft word; PROCTOR: No, no, Abigail, that’s done with; ABIGAIL: oh I marvel how such a strong man may let a sticky wife-; PROCTOR: You’ll speak nothing of Elizabeth” (page…
She holds the flaws of jealousy, spitefulness and mendacity. Abigail Williams is intensely jealous of Elizabeth Proctor because she is in love with her husband John Proctor. Abigail would stay up every night just to wait and see if John Proctor would be coming home to her. She also has a lot of anger and hate built up against Elizabeth that she wants to get rid of. By trying to do this she says some pretty harsh words about Elizabeth to her husband in hopes that he would come back to her in the long run. When it came to the situation of dancing in the woods, Abigail was not truthful in the first place but later on then admitted what had really happened. It could be inferred that Abigail played a big role in some of the events that happened in Salem, Massachusetts in…
“Abigail Williams, seventeen, enters – a strikingly beautiful girl, an orphan, with an endless capacity for dissembling. Now she is all worry and apprehension and propriety” (6 Miller). Further, a reader can infer that Abigail is an inquisitive girl and worries for her cousin. Despite that, Abigail‘s role is with her lying; for she can be headstrong. The girl threatened the other dancing girls to not speak a word to anyone about what they did in the forest. Due to the girl’s lies, the town worried that witchcraft was in their midst. Abigail had caused great confusion, and with it, the start if the Salem Witch Trials. Later, Abigail gains support of the court and…
Winona Ryder’s statement about Abigail Williams’ character is very controversial. I believe, unlike Ryder, that Abigail was indeed a villain. Much like her friends, Abigail loved being the “talk of the town.” Once Abigail realized she was receiving attention from the town, she found ways to keep it by accusing people of witchcraft. In Act 1, Abigail says, “...I saw Sarah Good with the Devil! I saw Goody Osburn with the Devil! I saw Bridget Bishop with the Devil!” This proves that Abigail made many false accusations against other townspeople to keep the attention on herself. On the other hand, some might believe that Abigail is innocent. People claim that Abigail and her friends are doing it for fun and games at first, but not long after,…
Arthur Miller’s The Crucible is a drama that takes place during the Salem Witch Trials. In the first act of the drama we are introduced to the character of Abigail Williams, who at first is seemingly innocent, however, we later discover that that is not the case. Abigail can be considered evil or immoral due to countless actions that are found throughout the drama. Though she does commit various atrocious acts we can’t help but feel sympathy for Abigail, because she is still at a young age and is very naive.…
To begin with, Abigail Williams starts the accusations of witchcraft in order to fulfill her ulterior motives. We first see hints of her motives when Abigail tells John Proctor, a married man under whom she had worked that, “I am waitin’ for you every night”(1099). While Abigail worked under John and Elizabeth Proctor, she had developed feelings for John. Elizabeth removes her from the house, which angers Abigail deeply. Proctor and Abigail see each other again when John goes to retrieve his maid Mary Warren. We can infer that Abigail continues to have for feelings for…
Although Abigail Williams liked to think of herself as an important part of the witch trials, her motivations for what she did were not that different than many ordinary teenagers: she sought revenge, put her own well-being ahead of others, and let her feelings for John dictate her actions.…
“Watching a compulsive liar scramble to damage control when the truth and secrets unfold, knowing that they’re hurting others, makes them inconceivably shameful.” This quote is a good definition to describe Abigail Williams morals and how she lives as a person. Abigail Williams is a character from the famous book, The Crucible by Arthur Miller. Malicious, psychotic, and manipulative are a couple of the many words that can describe Abigail Williams to more than an extent. She has no actual morals, she just thinks about herself, what she wants, and what she can say or do that will benefit her. Abigail lies, manipulates, and due to her selfish ways, her false testimonies, sent over twenty people to death, jail, because of her love for john…
Abigail posses an immoral persona and many of her actions are unethical. She wants one thing and one thing only, John Proctor, a married man. She participates in infidelity and constructs a web of lies. She knows that it is a sin to have sex with a married man but continues to proclaim her love for him, “I will not, i cannot! You loved me, John Proctor, and whatever sin it is you love me yet!” (The Crucible, Act 1). In connection with the infidelity she lies on Elizabeth, Proctor’s wife, and says her spirit stabbed her when in reality she stabbed herself. Similar to her lack of emotions it proves how immoral, unethical, and selfish she really is.…
The Crucible by Arthur Miller is a play that takes place in 1692 in the small Massachusetts village of Salem. Salem is a Puritan community; they are a very restrictive society with strong beliefs. They believe in hard work and prayer, therefore they consider material and sexual desires unnatural and evil. Abigail Williams, the main character is the reason for the witch trials that begin in Salem. She is dishonest, manipulative and her seductive ways is what makes her the antagonist of this play.…
Abigail Williams is the niece of Reverend Samuel Parris in Arthur Miller’s book the Crucible. Some people may think she’s just a normal girl but how can people be sure about that? Abigail Williams, age 17, is indeed a young girl, but she’s also an evil villain. Throughout the book, there are many examples to show how this is true. Abigail makes up lies to get what she wants, to get out of trouble, and to manipulate others. She also attempts a homicide just because she’s jealous. These are the details that will be examined in this essay.…