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John Proctor In Arthur Miller's Play 'The Crucible'

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The Crucible Essay In Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible, John Proctor is facing the decision of living but ruining his friends’ reputation as well as his own, or dying and defending the remaining amount of his goodness. Proctor chooses the ladder and dies to protect his friends and himself to prove he still has some goodness and for forgiveness of his past sins. What makes his claim believable is the fact that John Proctor refuses to give Danforth the confession with the argument that he would like to defend his name, and his friend’s name aswell. As he states “They think to go like saints. I like not to spoil their names” (Act IV. 637-638). Proctor continues to sign the confession but keeps from handing it to Danforth when he asks for
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