Miller chose to have Hale change because of the guilt Hale holds as he watches all the people he initially thought worked with the devil be killed. In the beginning of The Crucible by Arthur Miller, Reverend John Hale was brought to Salem during Act one in order to look at Reverend Parris’s daughter, Betty. He is a doctor who examines others for signs of witchcraft, and then tries to find a way to rid the victim from witchcraft. He is from Beverly and has dealt with witchcraft prior to Salem. At first, he was convinced that witchcraft was painted all over Salem because he examined both Betty and Tituba while he was there. He agreed with the court's ideologies of witchcraft being present in Salem, and believed he had caused Tituba to confess and all the girls for dancing in the forest. …show more content…
He starts to show change during the trial with the girls, John Proctor, and Mary Warren. He tries to defend John and Mary’s claim to the girls making everything up throughout the entire trial. In the text, it states, “"I cannot say he is an honest man; I know him little. But in all justice, sir, a claim so weighty cannot be argued by a farmer. In God's name, sir, stop here; send him home and let him come again with a lawyer-" (Miller Act I). Reverend Hale is shown trying to give John the best representation he can get in order to have a chance to win the court. If Hale didn’t want John to succeed, he never would’ve offered Proctor this chance to Danforth. He starts to show his doubts in all the girls during this scene and the court's