Rebecca Nurse Essays

  • Rebecca Nurse In The Crucible

    581 Words  | 3 Pages

    cannot I cannot.” Rebecca Nurse, a character from The Crucible, is on the verge of being condemned to hand for witchcraft and is being pressured into admitting her identity. Rebecca is a married women to Francis Nurse. She is a kind, religious woman who has raised eleven wonderful children. She is accused of witchcraft for the murdering of Ann Putnam’s seven children. Rebecca Nurse is a very religious, reasonable, and caring women, who I can relate to based on my life. Rebecca Nurse is a religious

  • Rebecca Nurse Quotes

    640 Words  | 3 Pages

    Rebecca Nurse and I “A child’s spirit is like a child, you can never catch it by running after it; you must stand still, and, for love, it will soon itself come back.” This is a quote said by Rebecca Nurse in The Crucible, this is said when Ann Putnam asks Rebecca to go check on Ruth to wake her up. Rebecca Nurse is an honest and caring woman in The Crucible that has eleven children and twenty six grandchildren. She was eventually accused of murdering Ann Putnam’s seven babies. Rebecca Nurse and

  • The Rebecca Nurse In The Crucible

    276 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Arthur MIller's "The Crucible" Rebecca Nurse seems the most fit to hold that role. Since she is a peacemaker, wise and valued she is very important in the community. Rebecca is wise to child care. In the the story she states, "I have eleven children and I am twenty - six times a grandma, and I have seen them all through their silly seasons, and when it come on them they will run the Devil bowlegged keeping up with their mischief."(Pg. 151, Ln. 522) Rebecca has enough knowledge in my opinion

  • Rebecca Nurse Case Analysis

    1032 Words  | 5 Pages

    of Rebecca Nurse     Your Majesties, Judge Corwin and Judge Hathorne, our defendant Rebecca Nurse, a highly respected member of the Salem community, has been wrongly accused of practicing witchcraft. We believe that these profound accusations against, the honest and trustworthy, Rebecca Nurse were fabricated by those who are trying to cause harm to the Nurse family. This accusation of practicing witchcraft is serious and is not to be taken lightly.   A warrant for the arrest of Rebecca Nurse was

  • Essay On Rebecca Nurse In The Crucible

    606 Words  | 3 Pages

    Similarities Between Rebecca Nurse and I “Why it is a lie, it is a lie; how may I damn myself? I cannot.” Rebecca Nurse stated in act IV of The Crucible. Rebecca was a woman of the truth. She refused to falsely state that she was a witch, even if it would save her life. She did it out morality. Mrs. Nurse was a religious, willing, honest, woman in which I resemble. To begin, Rebecca was a woman of strong, courageous faith. As am I. I attend Salem Lutheran Church in Delmont. Where I listen to

  • Examples Of Rebecca Nurse In The Crucible

    348 Words  | 2 Pages

    use it as revenge and others out of fear. Rebecca Nurse age 72 the wife of Mr. Nurse, is friends of most in the town and has no problems with any. She is a well respected and peaceful person who teaches us that integrity leads to more of a self-satisfied life. First of all, Rebecca Nurse shows that she is a well-respected person. Proctor asks, “Will you read this first, sir? It’s sort of a testament. The people signing it declare their good opinions of Rebecca, And my wife, And Martha Corey” (93). A

  • Rebecca Nurse Character Analysis

    724 Words  | 3 Pages

    tires off.” This quote was said by Rebecca Nurse who is a religious woman in her seventies. She is helpful to society and fights for what is right. Everyone in Salem appreciates her for her bold attitude and strong-willed personality. I am most similar to Rebecca Nurse because she is loyal to her friends, understanding of others, and a courageous woman. First, Rebecca’s personality is close to mine because she is loyal to her friends. In The Crucible, Rebecca stays loyal throughout the whole play

  • Rebecca Nurse Salem Witch Trial

    315 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rebecca Nurse, a seventy-one old woman was executed on July 19th, 1692. Nurse was a respectable citizen and Salem was shocked when she was accused and arrested on March 24th, 1692. She lived on a farm in Salem village with her husband, Francis Nurse, and eight children. Abigail Williams, Ann Putnam Jr., Ann Putnam Sr. and several others accused Nurse of witchcraft. According to them, Nurse’s spirit was tormenting Ann Putnam Sr. in her home that March. However, is it really true? Nurse and her husband

  • Rebecca Nurse Vs Abigail Williams

    368 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rebecca Nurse was highly respected throughout Salem and most people think that she shouldn’t have been hung or that she could be a witch, in her original trial she was not accused of being a witch but then the jury was forced to reconsider. Many villagers wrote petitions stating Rebecca Nurse’s innocence but they didn’t accomplish anything. During her trial Rebecca Nurse was not asked to speak first instead Abigail Williams spoke of how Nurse had just sent her spirt to hurt the girls just that morning

  • The Crucible Rebecca Nurse And John Proctor

    818 Words  | 4 Pages

    the many being Rebecca Nurse and John Proctor. The court system has not changed much, as Danforth is still believing that it is his way or you will be punished. There are also orphans and rogue livestock roaming the streets thanks to the overwhelming amount of people in the jails. (2) Parris exclaims to Danforth that Abigail and Mercy Lewis had fled the town with all of Parris’s money, having broken into his strongbox, or safe. (3) Parris recommends that the hangings of Rebecca Nurse,

  • Compare And Contrast Long Day's Journey Into Night And John Proctor

    809 Words  | 4 Pages

    In the Crucible by Arthur Miller which protagonist is John Proctor, his desire to do what is right because of his reputation, his name in the town was synonymous with integrity and pride, all he wanted was respect. Notwithstanding, Elizabeth gave him his respect he deserved after his death, and Mary Tyrone, the protagonist of Long Day’s Journey into Night by Eugene O’Neill does not want people to know that she’s addicted to morphine after Edmund’s birth. She’s the main focus of the play because each

  • King Louis XIV In Moliere's Tartuffe

    1071 Words  | 5 Pages

    In Tartuffe, which is considered to be Molière's seventeenth century masterpiece, King Louis XIV may be viewed as the eventual source of order. Indeed, he plays a critical role and he is a key element in the conflict resolution within the play, although he never actually appears in it, he has no speaking role, and there is no allusion to his name, too. King Louis XVI, also known as the Sun King, is the Deus ex Machina who enters the scene to restore all to order. As a matter of fact, his intervention

  • Barabus Character Analysis

    896 Words  | 4 Pages

    Barabus in the jew of malta is an extremely revengeful and ambitious character. The jew of malta appears as a victim in the beginning of the play. At the very beginning, barabus is shown as a unbelievably wealthy man and extremely shrewd and interested just in his own contentment. Barabus’s vicious evilness is more and more present in his behaviour. As the curtains rises, barabus the jew is discovered in his counting house counting the heaps of gold before him and speaking to himself the while.

  • Reflection On The Crucible

    1356 Words  | 6 Pages

    Putting you life in the hands of a jury and a judge is something that doesn’t happen much today, but it happened to may people in the 1680’s. Their lives were put into another person’s hands because they were accused for something they didn’t even do. Most of the time these people went into the trials pleading innocent, and then the judge was persuaded to sentence them to death. They did this because they thought that the defendant was lying. This is a perfect example of a crucible. A crucible is

  • The Little Foxes Character Analysis

    996 Words  | 4 Pages

    Often, allegorical references mark a work of literary fiction, or in this instance play, as truly well written, because it symbolizes the knowledge of the author. Even though Lillian Hellman, the play rite of this particular drama, meant it to be realistic in nature, she could not say away from Biblical references, including naming the title after a verse in the Song of Solomon. Stereotypes in the Bible commonly match the character traits of almost any literary character, however, the characters

  • Rebecca Nurse: A Symbol Of Purity In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

    658 Words  | 3 Pages

    Rebecca Nurse: A symbol of Purity in Curruption  The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, is a dramatized and partially fictionalized tale of the Salem witch trials which took place in the Province of Massachusetts Bay’s. in the early 1690. The trials led to the execution of twenty people, mostly young women, and the imprisonment of others. Rebecca Nurse, who was both a real victim of the Salem Witch Trails, and is a character in this historical play, was a righteous, esteemed, and brave woman who falls

  • Rebecca Nurse Be Enough To Judge Ruth Putnam To Do?

    1022 Words  | 5 Pages

    crazed words of little girls? If you sentence Rebecca Nurse to hang, the answer to both these questions would be the latter. The very fact that Rebecca Nurse would be accused on any charge is inconceivable and yet here we are, discussing it as if this 72-year-old woman is a threat to our society and our children.

  • Case Of Rebecca Nurse And Martha Corey Trial In The Crucible

    1377 Words  | 6 Pages

    Next, the cases of Rebecca Nurse and Martha Corey served as a stark juxtaposition to those prior. Nurse and Corey were not outsiders in society like the others; instead, they were considered upstanding elder women. Moreover, Nurse and Corey strongly opposed the girls’ “antics” and they challenged the investigation, to no avail. In these cases, we see some of the girls’ finest work in producing spectral evidence. Ann Putnam stated, I saw the Apperishtion of gooddy Nurs: and she did immediatly afflect

  • The Importance Of Happiness In The Great Gatsby

    1281 Words  | 6 Pages

    Every individual runs towards a dream, towards a goal, a chance to achieve true happiness. A happiness which differs for every person, based on who they are, their values and background. Nevertheless, happiness is something that gives satisfaction and completion to someone’s life, something that factors such as money cannot give, no matter what we think. In The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald criticizes the constraints thrusted upon women as dictated by the society stereotypes in the 1920s, and shows how

  • Gothic Elements In The Film Black Swan

    1455 Words  | 6 Pages

    1 Introduction When the film Black Swan came out in 2010, it was received very positively, being nominated for five Oscars the next year and even winning the award for best leading actress. Today, seven years later, it is still known for Natalie Portman's portrayal of an unstable ballerina. Mostly categorized as a Horror film, Black Swan can also be argued to be a Gothic story realized on film. When watching the film, I was especially interested to see it's Gothic elements and more precisely how