At the end of the Salem witch trials, there were a number of accused still waiting to either confess to witchcraft or be hanged. John Proctor was among those accused along with his pregnant wife, Elizabeth Proctor. Danforth, the judge, allowed Elizabeth to speak with John before the next hangings in order to plead with him for his life. Danforth allowed Elizabeth to speak to John because he thought that since she was his wife, she could convince him to confess to witchcraft.
Even though John Proctor commits adultery he still is trying to be an honest person and has been trying to keep his name clean. When John Proctor goes to court with Mary Warren to tell the Judges the truth. When the Judges started questioning him, he admitted his affair with Abigail Williams, which put his name at risk. John Proctor was given the choice to tell the truth and be prosecuted or confess to a crime he did not commit and be set free. He chose to tell the truth and got sent to jail.
Unicorns don’t exist, BUT apparently WITCHCRAFT does!!!! The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, is a well known play that tells the tale of a small town, Salem, Massachusetts, where witchcraft is frowned upon. John Proctor, an infamous man of the town, had decided to destroy his confession about witchcraft at the end of the story. The Crucible has a few main characters such as Abigail Williams, John Proctor, Reverend Hale, Reverend Parris, and Mary Warren.
John Proctor, the main character is accused of witchcraft by Mary Warren. However in actuality, Abigail and the other girls had pretended that Mary was bewitching them in the court. This caused Mary to eventually break down and wrongly accuse John Proctor of witchcraft. This one act of accusation brings upon John’s ultimate condemnation by confession. This can be noticed through Mary’s hysterical confession on page 118 where she points at Proctor and says, “You’re the Devil’s man!”
In the "Crucible" by Arthur Miller, Proctor admits orally to witchcraft, however declines to ensnare any other person. Danforth advises him that the court needs evidence of his admission as a marked, composed declaration. Delegate admits verbally to witchcraft, and Rebecca Nurse hears the admission. She is stunned by Proctor's activities, regardless she declines to admit to witchcraft. Delegate signs his name to the admission, however demolishes the record when he takes in the court will post it on the congregation entryway.
(Act Two) Proctor tries defending himself because “he confessed,” however Elizabeth realizes this does not make up for the fact he committed adultery. After Proctor’s confession, he still wants his name to be protected, however it clearly is not. The community realizes he is no longer the man he once was, for he has committed adultery. In the final scene of the novel, John Proctor says, “I have given you my soul, leave me my name!”(Act Four) “His name” as he refers is the appearance he has wanted all throughout the novel.
During the Salem witch trials of 1692, nineteen people were hung due to the accusation of them being witches. The Salem witch trial is the subject of the play The Crucible, by Arthur Miller. In the play, the protagonist is John Proctor and he does not believe in witchcraft and attempts to avoid the chaos, until he is drawn into it. Abigail Williams, a previous house maid of the Proctor family, had an affair with Mr. Proctor, and when Abigail admits to being a witch she realizes she has the power to make John hers. Elizabeth, John’s wife, is accused of witchcraft and shortly after John admits to the mistake he made with Abigail.
Does your word mean anything to you? Does what you stand for as a person mean anything even when someone tries to take it away from you? A word John Proctor lived by, integrity, which stands for honest and moral. The religious background adds to more for their moral compass so they will go to heaven and not be sinful. The author of this play Therefore, to die for the truth is better than to live a lie.
He defends his wife and tells the court that his wife fired Abigail because of their affair. When the court brought Elizabeth Proctor into the court and asked her about the affair she denied it. Even though she knew the affair was true she denied it because she didn’t know Proctor had confessed and wanted to take her husband’s name
Guilt is emotional torture that transforms one's psychological operation. In the play, The Crucible by Arthur Miller, before the Salem witch trials emerge, John Proctor cheats on his wife Elizabeth Proctor, with young Abigail. Causing him to live with an eternal shame that generates dispute. Proctor’s endeavour is to elude from his wrongdoing, but he cannot because of the disgrace he feels himself to be when around Elizabeth. Miller shows that John Proctor's emotional and behavioral conflict rises from his guilt.
The end of the Crucible is very suspenseful when the protagonist, John Proctor, is faced with choosing between confessing to a lie or dying for the truth. At first, Proctor is hesitant and signs the papers, confessing himself to evil, but before the signed paper is collected by the court, he tears it apart and is sentenced to death. This was his best option, for it stopped him from living a remorseful life. His decision to tear apart the signed confession was the most correct not only for himself but for his family and the community as well.
John Proctor was known for being a church man with a pure name; He was relatively admired throughout Salem. Proctor was a Puritan, but he sinned when he committed adultery with Abigail Williams. Because Proctor is a strong religious man, he confesses multiple times throughout the play. While in a heated conversation with Hale, Proctor is asked to state the Ten Commandments, he pauses and his wife Elizabeth states, “Adultery, John” (Arthur Miller 1278). Proctor feels a pain heart and tries to grin it away.
When people think of the play, “The Crucible”, they usually picture the witch trials and women being hanged, but Arthur Miller depicts the witch trials in a completely new light. He shows through a story that the witch trials were much more than just people calling others witches. There was deceit, pain, greed, and more. Through the play, we follow the character, Abigail, observe her actions and their consequences. We witness the lives of people she impacts, what happens to them, and how many times she lies to get her way.
As written in The Crucible john proctor refuses as miller has stated, “Because it is my name! Because I cannot have another in my ,life! Because I am not worth the dust on the feet of them that hang!” (Miller 1164). By saying this John Proctor has just realized and ends up trying to get the point across that he no longer wants to go through with his lie and feels guilty about the situation he is in.
John has the conscience of an honest man even though he has committed a severe sin, which he hides, adultery. Because of this his name is tainted, making the reader doubt the goodness in him. When Proctor reveals the truth in court, we are surprised because he has confessed knowing it will blacken his name, and he has done this in order to save his wife, Elizabeth Proctor. Because of this we are able to see that Proctor bears responsibility for what has occurred. However when he confesses, Abigail turns against him and accuses Proctor of being a witch.