Importance Of Reputation In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

463 Words2 Pages

In The Crucible, there are many characters concerned about their reputation. Several want to keep a good name and others feel like the truth is more important. However, I know the truth is always more important than a good name. Telling the truth has kept me out of trouble many times even though I didn’t look so good afterwards. When I was in fourth grade, my best friend Emily and I made up a new game. You started out by the swing set and you had five seconds to run before the other chased you around trying to spit on you. Even though it was disgusting, we thought it was the most fun we had ever had. Well, one day, our friend Brooklyn wanted to join in. She started out by running around the soccer field until she started to breathe very heavily. Later on that day Emily and I got called out of class. To our surprise, Brooklyn ended up having a asthma attack. The teachers asked us about it, we could have easily lied about it and been out of trouble but instead we told the truth. By doing so this made us look pretty bad but we would have looked even …show more content…

Except this time was only a few weeks ago and probably less dramatic too. So, I was on my way home from Conway late at night and as I was passing over the flats I didn’t realize how fast I was going. Little did I know there were three cops right behind me. As I came over the first hill about to enter the flats, I see blue lights in my rear view. My heart sank… But after thirty seconds he turned them off to my surprise because I was going eighty-five in a sixty-five. Obviously, that's not the bad part because when I got home my mom’s insurance car thing alerted her that her car had went over eighty. Even though she had proof, I stilled planned to lie but realized there's only fifty fifty chance I’ll get in trouble if I tell the truth. So I told the truth, she wasn’t mad but it made me look bad when I was the one having to sign a paper saying I went over