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
During her time serving the Proctor family she began to fall in “love” (most likely lust) with John Proctor. This affair was spread around the town as a rumor until Elizabeth Proctor, John's wife, fired Abigail because of her suspicions. Abigail was from then on shunned by most in the village. Her affair caused her to be hated, and since her social standing in the village was already low on the social ladder it contributed to her desire for power.
Abigail said to John, “I look for John Proctor that took me from my sleep and put knowledge in my heart... I will not, I cannot! You loved me, John Proctor, and whatever sin it is, you love me yet!”(Miller, 150). During this brief conversation between the two, Abigail says on how she still believes that he loves her and wishes to be with her in her imagination when in reality he doesn’t want anything to do with her anymore and this creates most of the conflicts and how the story ends. This quote shows on how delusional Abigail really is with her love with John and how she believes that he wants to leave his family
Mrs. Proctor says she fired Abigail because she suspected that Proctor had been seduced by the 17 year old to commit adultery that he later admitted to. As a result, Abigail became jealous and set out for revenge, after all the earlier woods action and Mary Warren brief support she had Mrs. Proctor arrested for witchcraft claiming that she crafted a poppet of her and used it to physically hurt her. On the stand, Abigail says she never intended to hurt John Proctor even though he ended up getting him killed. We later find out during the defendants questioning of Mr. Proctor that Abigail had no ill will against Mrs. Proctor until the trial. The two had not spoken to each other again until the trial and in his own words says, “Abigail confessed the truth to him, and wanted to run away with him”.
Abigail is consumed by the idea that John Proctor loves her. She considers that John’s kind actions towards her are more than just lust. Her acknowledgement that it would be a sin for him to love another woman besides his wife reveals that she believes that John Proctor has such deep feelings for her, which are undeniable no matter how wrong it may be. Though Abigail appears to be caught up in her idea of their forbidden love, her romanticized obsession is not enough to prove that her actions are completely motivated by her obsession of
In Arthur Miller’s, The Crucible, passions turned into problems. Witchcraft in Salem Massachusetts became a remembered event since 1692. Three girls were said to have interactions with the devil. When they were confronted about it they denied every interaction the people who were convicted they would say they weren’t a witch and would bring someone else’s name into the equation. Those who would admit to being a witch would go to jail, but for those who denied having interaction with the devil would have been trialed and hung, so really, anyway you put it
In The Crucible, Aurthur Miller illustrates, and suggests how fear of losing someone leads to atrocious and vicious acts. It all starts when Abigail gets caught for performing witchcraft. In this time Salem was Puritan, they were full of fear in the devil, and would kill anyone who was apart of it. Abigail's behavior in the woods lead her to be scared of the other girls she was with to betray her and her name being blackened.
The Crucible was published in the year 1953, written by Arthur Miller. This story's setting revolves around Salem Massachusetts in the bay area. Throughout this story many of the characters endure changes because what is going on around them and the tight situations they are in. In The Crucible There are many situations where many characters have to tell lies to stay alive and not be hanged. Through this process there are a lot of dynamic characters but one that really jumps out in my opinion is the farmer John Proctor.
The actions of Abigail Williams, Mary Warren, and Reverend Parris were all influenced by fear. Abigail feared that she was going to lose John Proctor to his wife, therefore she tired what she could to get her out of the picture. In the beginning, Abigail
He started out by trying to keep the affair a secret. John lived a good life, he had lots of land, three sons, and a wife, basically all you could ask for as a Prutain back then. His lust for Abigail Williams got in the way of all that. They end up having an affair and it destroyed Proctors self-respect and he felt very guilty. He is too ashamed and fearful of what might happen to him, to let out his secret.
Fear and failure In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible In the story there were women in the forest dancing in nudity and which was a sign of witchery. In the crucible the author quotes blames elizabeth a of witchery. One time my and my brother were fight and we had to talk about what we were fighting about the our parents and this relates to the judge in the court finding out who is innocent and who is not. A lot of people are fear failure.
Abigail does all this for the man that she loves and had an affair with, John Proctor. If the reader begins to focus on John, his actions and what he stands for, they are easily able to recognize he portrays characteristics of the flawed nature of an individual. It is shown through the fact that he had an affair, isn’t able to forgive himself, and at the end of the book, is unable to give up something dear to him to save himself and others. When analyzing John Proctor, the first thing that stands out is that he had an affair with a 17 year-old Abigail Williams. Proctor has a wife who loves him and three children but still decides to stray from his family and fancies someone else.
Afterwards, she was willing to destroy anyone in the way of her getting to be with him. Proctor definitely wishes he had never laid with Abigail, and everyone else was paying for his mistake, as she ruined everyone’s lives, “I have known her, sir. I have known her.” (Act III, 378). A single lie snowballed, leaving death and terror in its wake, all because Abigail could not, and likely did not want to control herself.
Fear and suspicion can cause many harmful outcomes, and possibly destroying a whole society. There are many different examples, but a very good example is in the story The Crucible by Arthur Miller. In The Crucible, fear was the main reason the village faced many witchcraft incidents, and it played a major role in placing many people in jail or getting them killed. Through one of the trials a women named Tituba gets accused of witchcraft by one of the girls, so out of fear she accuses many other people that have nothing to do with any witchcraft activities. And that was the process that was used by almost everyone in the community.
In Arthur Miller 's play The Crucible, false accusations and fear are used to imprison and kill many people accused of being witches. In this way, The Crucible stands as an allegory for McCarthy 's communist hunt, during which many people were also killed and imprisoned due to accusations of communism. By comparing McCarthyism to the Salem Witch Trials, Miller is able to communicate that people should not conform to societal trends because these trends may be misleading and cause innocent people to get hurt. Many characters in The Crucible serve as allegories to McCarthy 's communist hunt, specifically Abigail Williams, Giles Corey, and Betty Parris.