Sunday, August 18, 2019
DISCUSS HOW FAR JOHN PROCTOR, ELIZABETH PROCTOR AND REVEREND HALE CAN :: English Literature
DISCUSS HOW FAR JOHN PROCTOR, ELIZABETH PROCTOR AND REVEREND HALE CAN  BE SAID TO REMAIN TRUE TO HIS OR HER BELIEFS    The Crucible is a container that resists hear or the hollow at the  bottom of an ore furnace. However its connotations include melting  pot, in the symbolic sense, and the bearing of a cross. Elizabeth,  John Proctor's wife; a cold, childless woman who is an upright  character who cannot forgive her husband's adultery until just before  he died: she is accused of being a witch. Reverend Hale, a  self-proclaimed expert on witchcraft; at the play's end tries to save  the accused. John Proctor, a good man with human failures and a hidden  secret, a affair with Abigail, he is often the voice of reason in the  play; accused of witchcraft.    "I do not judge you. The magistrate that sits in your heart judges  you." This is where Elizabeth suspects that John has committed  adultery, but knows how good of man he is and tries to look over it.  "Adultery, John." This is where John tells her and she makes it sound  like it is news to her even though she has known for a while. She is  trying to have John have a "good" name and not be a name that everyone  discards. "No, sir." Here she is protecting his name but she doesn't  know that John has just come out and said that he committed lechery.  She thought that she was saving him but she was actually making it  worse for him.    "I mean to crush him utterly if he has shown his face." Here he is  talking about if he ever encountered the Devil that he would literally  kick his ass. This shows how he is a hipper rite against being a  Puritan. Even though he is a religious man he still has the human  character of having an evil side to himself.    "But I will cut off my hand before I ever reach for you again." John  is talking to Abigail and how he is finished with seeing her and that  he doesn't want any part of her. John goes through from being amoral  to immoral and then to moral, then back to amoral at the end. "It's  winter in here yet." Elizabeth and John were talking about how he was  working all day seeding even though he was at Salem to see what the  fuss was all about. Here he shows his character toward Elizabeth by  lying to her and she can't trust him. "Let Rebecca go like a saint,  for me it is a fraud." This shows how he changes and starts to take    					    
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