Friday, January 24, 2020
Free Essays on The Crucible: The Lessons Learned :: Essay on The Crucible
      The Crucible ââ¬â The Lessons Learned           Great events, whether they are beneficial or tragic ones, bring change in a  person. These scenarios can give one an entirely new perspective on life, and  turn around his way of thinking. Events such as the Salem Witch Trials show the  people involved what they could not see before. In Arthur Miller's The Crucible,  Elizabeth Proctor, Reverend Hale, and John Proctor gain valuable insight into  themselves, as well as others.            Elizabeth Proctor has many moments which show how she is changing throughout  the play. When she is trying to persuade Proctor to tell the court that Abigail  said the girls were not practicing witchcraft, Elizabeth blurts out, "John, if  it were not Abigail that you must go to hurt, would you falter now? I think  not." Elizabeth is confessing that she believes Proctor had an affair with  Abigail. She is giving him no mercy by showing that she will never forget what  happened. When Elizabeth is being accused of stabbing Abigail, she instructs  Proctor to go to court, and tells him "Oh, John, bring me soon!" Elizabeth is  gaining trust in John. She is forgetting his act of adultery and now has faith  that he will defend her. At the end of the play, when Proctor is sentenced to  death, Elizabeth says that "he [has] his goodness now. God forbid I take it from  him!" Elizabeth is admitting that John was righteous to confess his sin of  lechery, and she should have pardoned him. She consi   ders herself impure for not  showing mercy, and does not want to take away from his glory. Elizabeth has  transformed from an ignorant victim of adultery, to a forgiving, loving wife.             Reverend Hale arrives in Salem thinking that he will become a hero and rid  Salem of the devil. Hale is speaking to the townspeople when he says, "Have no  fear now--we shall find him out if he has come among us, and I mean to crush him  utterly if he has shown his face!" Hale thinks that there is an actual devil in  the town, and they must defeat it. He is trying to show the people of Salem that  he is their savior, and that he knows exactly what to do.  					    
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