An interesting fact about John Proctors affair with Abigail affects the story a lot because I wasn’t expecting that secret to ever come out. I honestly didn’t think it was that deep because he curved her twice. So I thought she would get the hang of he don’t want her anymore and that he wants his wife. But, instead she wants to frame Elizabeth and put a lot of people life in risk just to get something she isn’t even going to get. Abigail puts a lot of people live in danger and goes through all this mumbo jumbo just run out of town. I believe that is really ironic because through out the process Abigail gets Procter to do adultery knowing that he has a wife and that she was working for Proctor and his family. After a while his wife Elizabeth found out and John confessed to her that he had an affair. Then, Abigail got fired from working at their house. …show more content…
I feel like that is one of the dumbest things I have seen for that reason and she confessed that she saw the devil and Elizabeth was accused of witch craft and didn’t confess and she would have been hung. The judge was ironic as well because so many evidence explaining that everybody is innocent but instead he decided to do things his ways and just not listen to anyone except Abigail. I find that interesting because out of all the evidence and the petition that everyone signed. I was surprised that he didn’t even look at it he just ignored
There was a girl named Abigail who was also one of the girls dancing in the woods who had an affair with John proctor. John Proctor was a man who also had a wife who he was cheating on her with Abigail, later in the story he ended up getting hung. In both stories
Dramatic irony is a huge part of 'The Crucible' as throughout the play, there are many ideas and notions that the audience knows but the other characters do not. In many scenes, especially scenes with Abigail Williams, there is an ounce of dramatic irony that causes frustration among the audience, whilst also creating a story line. An example of this is when the audience knows Abigail and "the girls" are lying about witches in Salem because of the scene in Act One describing how scared they were about people finding out what happened in the woods. The audience, Abigail and "the girls" know the whole witch idea is a huge rouse but the other characters in the play do not have any idea. This causes the audience to become overly frustrated and
This is basically the only reason for conflict in the story. If it hadn’t been for Proctor’s decision to commit adultery, and lechery, Abigail wouldn’t have accused Elizabeth, therefore saving both Mr. and Mrs. Proctor. In Act one, Proctor says, “Abby, I may think of you softly from time to time. But I will cut of my hand before I ever reach for you
Oh the irony.... Arthur Miller portrays the irony of the puritan society through Elizabeth Proctor. Through the way she carries herself, by what others say and how she reacts in certain situations. Arthur Miller reveals irony throughout the story by the judging of others. Miller shows this through the character Goody Proctor when she states, “I can not judge you.
Out of the many varying types of irony presented in Arthur Miller’s, The Crucible, situational is by far the most evident. Miller included this to show the idea that the entirety of the Salem witch trials was ironic. The Puritans followed the concept of a theocracyin an attempt to bring the community closer together and ultimately rid themselves of the danger of wicthraft. However, this was most certainly not the case in Salem. Sotuational irony playes a part in this towards the end of the play when the survuors are starting to realize all of the bad things that have come from their actions over the past year, “there are orphans wandering from house to house; abandoned cattle bellow on the highroads, the stink of rotting crops hangs everywhere,
G.Williamson 27 January 2023 CCR English III Block 2 ¨The crucible¨ is a story that revolves around the salem witch trials. Many different themes could come from this story. One main theme I thought of was irony. Irony is known as a state of affairs or an event that seems deliberately contrary to what one expects and is often amusing as a result.
John Proctor had a very important decision to make, it was either let his wife lose her life for something she never did or to waive his name and reputation and come clean about his affair with Abigail. During this time no man wanted to share their empathy to the whole entire town not Salem this was very difficult for John to do but he knew it was right to save the person he loved the most he couldn’t lose her for something he did in the past. “... trembling, his life collapsing about him: I have known her, sir. I have known her.”
John had an affair with Abigail when Elizabeth was sick, which made Abigail crazy for him. John forces Abigail to began accusing innocent people so that she would be able to finally accuse Elizabeth. When Proctor finds himself on trial, he reveals to the court that he knows Abigail. This was a very bad decision because now the court will find it hard to believe him. Proctor tries to tell the judges that Abigail wants to replace his wife.
Pride is not more worthy than an innocent life. Arthur Miller clearly illustrates that some of the characters, such as John Proctor, choose pride over their own lives. I’ve learned throughout the book the lack of limits characters will endure, to make sure their name is clear. I saw how often the “justice” in the book favored what it wanted to hear and thought was the truth. Ironically, the characters had to lie to feed into the “truth” that there are witches in Salem, in order to keep their own lives.
Abigail says to Proctor in Act I, “Oh, I marvel how such a strong man may let such a sickly wife be-,” then John cuts her off and says “You will speak nothin’ of Elizabeth!” (1270). In this Abigail is showing her anger to John about how he is now staying committed to his wife and trying his best to keep Abigail out of his life. When asked why Arthur Miller asked why he decided to make Abigail and John have an affair, he said he “…Could find no good reason why Abigail distinguished so vehemently between the guilt of a husband and a wife. So I took creative license with her character to make the connection between sexuality and politics more dramatic,” (Shmoop).
Hypocrisy is the practice of claiming to have moral standards or beliefs to which one's own behavior does not conform; pretense. In the book the Crucible there are many hypocrites some dishonest some just following any one to be guilty, but one of the many character is Judge Danforth he mocks Marry when he ask "How were you instructed in your life? Do you not know that God damns all liars?"(3-84), since Danforth is in power for being the judge he thinks that everyone else is ignorant and not being equal as him.
John Proctor's Irony is crazy. Danforth learns that the girls danced in the woods. Hathorne questions Mary Warren and asks her to pretend to faint. When she cannot, he insists that she is lying now she cannot faint as she claims to have done before. Danforth asks Abigail if she could have imagined the spirits.
Proctor realized the truth behind everything and decided it was time to come forward and tell Danforth, “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, and you must see it now” (Miller ). John tries to reveal who Abigail really is but it does not help the lives of those who are to be hanged.
Abigail first thought that maybe it was because she had found out about the affair. John Proctors emotions towards Abigail made him make a bad decision in the story when he decided to have an affair with Abigail in The
Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible in 1953, as a response to McCarthyism, which is, in general, accusing people of crimes with little to no proof. It ran rampant through the United States during the Second Red Scare through the early 1950s (exactly when Arthur Miller wrote The Crucible). In The Crucible, Miller juxtaposes the leaders, who rationally think for themselves, and the followers, who believe what everybody else believes, through irony, imagery, and denotation. The Crucible is riddled with irony, and Arthur Miller utilizes situational and dramatic irony to show the difference between followers and leaders.