The Importance Of Actions In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

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In Arthur Miller’s short play The Crucible, one is swept on a world pool of adventures through the rampant society of the Puritans. As the plot begins to unfold, the reader is able to detect a shift in the society as the fear of witches living amongst the community compounds tensions already formed. Tension can be detected in various occasions throughout the play such as neighbors arguing over one another for land, Abigail’s group of followers foreshadowing her every move and following through with her surplus demands, or even Abigail sparking the commonality of lying about seeing people with the devil. Actions such as the few listed have a common theme woven throughout them, and this theme can be seen carried throughout the rest of the book. …show more content…

Fear and hysteria intertwine themselves and lead to a full outburst and breakdown within the Puritan community. Actions such as Abigail framing Tituba and watching her get whipped to spare herself, Abigail framing Elizabeth for stabbing her with a poppet, and threatening the group of girls to never mention anything about their dancing goes to show how Abigail’s actions are self-deviated towards only her well-being. Abigail was trying to avoid the fact that she executed unholy activities within the Puritan community, and as a result she began to blame those around her to deviate from the truth. Putting into little regard the effect her outcomes might have on …show more content…

It is through this motive that one is capable of disregarding the effects of their actions on others and solely focusing on how they are able to benefit the most. One is able to see this within The Crucible with Abigail sending the town into a raucous in attempts to deviate from the sins she is performing, or Proctor lying to stray from spoiling his good name. American people found a commonality in fear, so they all united together in attempts to contain the fear by locking the Japanese away from the rest of the world—taking into little regard how they were flipping the Japanese lives around. Those affected endured the consequences that stemmed from the actions of the people around them, and from these consequences most suffered as a result. It is prominent in both forms of literature mentioned, that one’s intentions in most instances are self-motivated, so those affected in the long run are disregarded and forgotten as if they are never given a