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Mary Warren The Crucible Essay

891 Words4 Pages

Reading the “Crucible by Arthur Miller” can be one of the most drama-filled intense stories anyone might ever get to read. Each page is filled with countless accusations and inequities, leading us to contradict ourselves and in time, make us question our own morality. In the book the reader gets to immerse themselves into what it would be like to be any part of a minority in 1692. They get multiple perspectives on what it is like to live in fear of judgment and false trials, they get to see how different characters react under these circumstances. The village lived in fear of anything “different.” Things that were different were seen as un-Godly or unjust. The legend of witches creeped in every household in the village, this created an every …show more content…

So, she was mostly left out of the picture. Until Abigail and the legend of witches came along. Under pressure and the blame of the village, Mary Warren broke. She fell apart revealing the lies she was hiding. When anyone grows up in a place like Salem, perjury can become easy to manipulate. Mary found ways to twist the truth in subtle ways to keep out of danger. This was Mary's representation of “Herd behavior”. She learned to create a fake self. She created ways to make herself look the best she could possibly look at all times. She knew that over time, doing this could make people believe that’s just how she is. But when fingers were pointed in her way, that's where her skills were under developed. She had lived so long without being in the spotlight of accusation. So when she finally was put under judgment, she broke. She forced the spotlight onto Abigail creating a scene in the courtroom. Mary Warren grabbed onto the only tactic she knew, to exude a …show more content…

Hathrone accuses Mary Warren of “pretending to faint.” Abigail and multiple girls suddenly claim that “Mary Warren has her spirit out against them.” John Proctor admits to his affair with Abigail and makes evidence to the courtroom that Elizabeth would never lie about John and Abigail having a history together. The courtroom calls Elizabeth as a witness and she lies about the fact that John and Abigail could ever have an affair. At this time in the book, we have reached the highest and most crucial place, the climax. Out of some wronging, truth has spilled out. Danforth has accused Proctor

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