Anna Lehmann of Forest City, is a member of the Forrest City Everreadies 4-H club. The garment she chose to create is a purple knit skirt. Anna loves the color purple as it is a sign of royalty and therefore helps to create a classy semi-formal outfit. Other formal design elements of the skirt include a side slit and diagonal seam running from her hip to lower thigh on the front and back of the skirt. Anna learned to enjoy sewing knit fabric and the many challenges that knit fabric presents.
The Puritans arrived in America in the 16th and 17th centuries hoping create a purified version of the church as they believed the Church of England had still had too many components of catholicism. Humans are also invertly evil and this wickedness is displayed throughout many stories. Finally, moral values are also a central conflict to many stories. Puritanism, the evils of all humans, and moral conflict are a central themes to all three of The Crucible, “Young Goodman Brown”, and “The Minister’s Black Veil”. Although these stories are seemingly unrelated stories on the surface however when considering the under-the-surface meanings of these stories many similarities appear including the impact of Puritanism, the wickedness of all humans, and moral conflict.
In the beginning of this book I was having mixed emotions but it got clearer the more I read also,the scenes helped me clear it out too. In the scene where Tom was being forced to whip someone...an innocent lady he refused because he knew it wasn't right. So he took the beating himself because he was putting cotton in the ladies basket. I was angry because the slave owners shouldn't be able to do that because it isn't right and they should be treated the way they are treating the slaves.
1. It’s the end of the “long day”-midnight- when Act IV opens. How is the fog symbolic of the play’s thematic ideas? When Act IV opens it emphasizes, "Outside the windows, the wall of fog appears denser than ever" (O'Neill 125). The fog symbolizes the theme of trying to escape from reality or the drug abuse can affect one's family.
In the play along with the movie The Crucible, John Proctor and Abigail Williams have interesting relationship bound by adultery and lies. Abigail becomes obsessed with John and will do anything to be with him. John quickly shuts down her fantasy ideas and tells her that what happened between them was a one-time thing that will never take place again and a mistake on his part. With this knowledge, she soon spends all her time plotting to get John all to herself and to make him fall in love with her, even if that means taking out John’s wife, Elizabeth. We see many examples of this forbidden relationship through their secret encounters and arguments in both examples of the story, still, there were more scenes of John and Abby alone in the movie than in the play.
1.) Vita lives with her mom, Marlowe, her cat, and the Keatses in an apartment building. Her dad left when she was young, and had never come back. Vita also had a dog called Argus , who died, and a cat called Marlowe. 2.)
Towards the end, Hale changes from a person who carries his heavy written laws to a person who hates the court. During Act III, after Danforth arrested Proctor, Hale is so angry with the court that he yells, "I denounce these proceedings, I quit this court!” (Act 3, 120). The quote might seem really simple, but it is significant because Hale finally figures out that the court system is a failure to the society, and also figures out what he should be go after. As a result in Act 4 when Hale tries to convince Elizabeth to tell Proctor to confess, Hale says, “‘Beware, Goody Proctor cleave to no faith when faith brings blood.
“Character Analysis over The Crucible” Arthur Miller is a commonly-known playwright, most famous for his 1953 play, The Crucible. The basis for The Crucible came from the witch trials which occurred in Salem, Massachusetts during the puritan era. Miller even uses some of the same characters in his dramatized play that were a part of the original witch trials in Salem. However, Miller made a few alterations to the historical members of the Salem society in order to suit his dramatic purpose in The Crucible, particularly Abigail Williams, John Proctor, and Reverend Samuel Parris.
At the beginning of Act 3, Eric enters the room "miserably," and his request for a drink suggests that he is trying to avoid facing the consequences of his actions. However, as the scene progresses, Eric begins to take responsibility for his behaviour and acknowledges the harm he has caused. For example, when the Inspector suggests that Eva Smith/Daisy Renton was pregnant with Eric's child, Eric admits to being the father and expresses his regret: "My God!... I wasn't in love with her or anything—but I liked her—she was pretty and a good sport—" This quote reveals that Eric has learned to take ownership of his actions, and his use of the phrase "My God!" highlights the gravity of the situation.
“The Crucible” is a fiction story that took place in a small town called Salem in the state of Massachusetts in 1692 during the spring time. The plot of this story is about a group of girls who went into the forest led by a black slave named Tituba. They were all dancing in the forest until Reverend Parris caught them dancing in the forest and even saw one of the girl naked. Parris’s daughter Betty who was there in the forest falls into a coma-like state when Reverend Parris caught them. Reverend Parris only noticed his daughter was sick the next day and accused Abigail William, who is Reverend Parris’s niece, of witchery and caused his daughter to go into a coma-like state.
Humans are born to be afraid. A feeling of fear is only natural for humans to feel; it is a part of who we are. However, it can be more than just a feeling. Fear can be a weakness in humans even though it is only our natural instinct for survival. Sometimes, fear is so powerful that it can blur our rationality and dominate how we think and what we do.
The Crucible by Arthur Miller was a play that was written in 1953, and had a strange 4 act structure. Contrary to the original 3 or 5 act structures. Originally, Aelius Donatus said that there had to be a beginning, middle, and end to a play (Protasis, Epitasis, and Catastrophe). Later, the Romans developed the 5 act play that had: A starting point, rising actions, the climax, falling actions, and the resolution. The 5 act play was commonly and popularly used by Shakespeare.
Act 4 Reader’s Response When I began reading act four of The Crucible, I hadn’t developed strong feelings, positive or negative, about any characters. There were certain people I didn’t necessarily like throughout the first three acts, but there was never a point when I became extremely frustrated with any of them. In this act, that wasn’t the case. Deputy Governor Danforth proved to me as act four progressed that he wasn’t concerned for the people of Salem, he was concerned about not allowing himself, the government or his God look weak. I discovered how his reputation became more important to him than standing up to the hysteria and saving innocent lives.
The color gold used as a background color or in the halo symbolizes purity, royalty and glory of life after death. The crown/halo she is often depicted with, shows that the early Christians viewed her as a holy being, similar to the angels. Pink symbolizes eternal innocence, this is because she was the only virgin ever to conceive and give birth to a child, this only happened because God made it this way (Mulch). That is how he wanted his Son to enter into the
Shawn Jande Ms. Clancy American Literature B3 15 November 2015 The Crucible Analytical Essay Imagine, being accused of a crime you didn’t commit by your neighbors and friends out of jealousy, and desire. This is what many people in the town of Salem had to go through during the time of the Salem Witch Trials. People's motives such as: gaining and maintaining power, and aspirations for what other people had caused them to make irrational, and atrocious decisions. In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, desire and power drive characters to create chaos in the community.