Preview

Anonymous: a Gift

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
324 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Anonymous: a Gift
When Mary Warren returns home, she gives Elizabeth a doll that she sewed in court, saying that it is a gift. She reports that thirty-nine people now stand accused. John and Mary argue over whether Mary can continue attending the trials. He threatens to whip her, and Mary declares that she saved Elizabeth’s life that day. Elizabeth’s name was apparently mentioned in the accusations (Mary will not name the accuser), but Mary spoke out in Elizabeth’s defense. Proctor instructs Mary to go to bed, but she demands that he stop ordering her around. Elizabeth, meanwhile, is convinced that it was Abigail who accused her of witchcraft, in order to take her place in John’s bed.
Hale visits the Proctors because he wants to speak with everyone whose name has been mentioned in connection with witchcraft. He has just visited Rebecca Nurse. Hale proceeds to ask questions about the Christian character of the Proctor home. He notes that the Proctors have not often attended church and that their youngest son is not yet baptized. Proctor explains that he does not like Parris’s particular theology. Hale asks them to recite the Ten Commandments. Proctor obliges but forgets the commandment prohibiting adultery.
At Elizabeth’s urging, Proctor informs Hale that Abigail told him that the children’s sickness had nothing to do with witchcraft. Taken aback, Hale replies that many have already confessed. Proctor points out that they would have been hanged without a confession. Giles and Francis rush into Proctor’s home, crying that their wives have been arrested. Rebecca is charged with the supernatural murders of Mrs. Putnam’s babies. A man bought a pig from Martha Corey and it died not long afterward; he wanted his money back, but she refused, saying that he did not know how to care for a pig. Every pig he purchased thereafter died, and he accused her of bewitching him so that he would be incapable of keeping one

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In this scene, Abigail clearly pretends that she sees Mary Warren's spirit, and then the other girls go along with it. At these witch trials, the evidence was created by the accusers, and could not be refuted; however, during…

    • 889 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    John Proctor, a respected and followed Puritan, although an adulterer, became one of the most afflicted men in Salem when vengeance was sought upon his wife. Elizabeth, John's beloved wife, became envied by Abagail Williams, when John ended their affair. Abagail accused Elizabeth of sending her spirit out to stab her with a needle so that Elizabeth would be either hung or jailed. By pushing Elizabeth out of John's life, Abagail thought that John would rediscover his love for her. In an attempt to save his wife's life, he pressures his maidservant, Mary Warren, to confess that the group of girls crying "witchery" were faking. When Abagail breaks Mary's confession by scaring her publicly, Mary turns and accuses John of coming to her in the night and threatening her for her life if she didn't save Elizabeth. John, being accused of witchery, had no choice but to be jailed and hung in order to further cleanse the country of evil. On the day of John's hanging, Minister Hale and Judge Danforth came to him to plead with him to sign the confession. John had to make the decision to…

    • 1228 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    and sticking a needle in it's stomach for safe keeping Abigail knew it would be taken to…

    • 463 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Reverend Hale is talking to John Proctor and Corey Giles about the imprisonment and charges against Rebecca Nurse and Giles’ wife. In the upheaval caused by the accusations Abigail, Betty, and Mary Warren gave, John Proctor’s word that they are lying means nothing. Hale cannot control the town anymore and is left to almost begging for more time to get confessions from those accused and to gain reason from the town. Abigail is trusted and believed because of her family tie to Reverend Parris. Since they are related by blood, a majority of the town has no reason not to believe her. Tituba, the slave of Parris, is not trusted because she is seen as inferior and part of a different lesser culture that may condone dancing in the woods.…

    • 305 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Proctor is arrested on charges of witchcraft along with his wife, Elizabeth. The people that are arrested for witchcraft live if they confess, but hang if they deny the charges, even if the charges are not truthful. This plays an important part in the testing of John’s integrity later in the play. In the beginning, we find out that Proctor had an affair with the niece of the town reverend, Abigail Williams. This displays a lack of integrity for John, but nobody knows about it until later. John shows his integrity when he confesses to this affair later in the play. At the beginnig of the play, the Proctor’s want no part in the witch trials. They get dragged into the proceedings when Abigail accuses Elizabeth of hurting her with a voodoo doll. John has integegrity when he tries to save his wife from being hanged. He gets depositions from others in the town that show how good his wife was. He has Mary Warren, who was working in the Proctor house, confess that she was the one who made the doll and stuck the needle in it. This does not work though, and Mary turns on Proctor and gets him arrested. When Proctor is in jail, he shows his integrity once again. He knows that he has the…

    • 487 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    His change occurs when Proctor confesses that Abigail told him that the sickness was not witchcraft. Surprised and confused Hale says, “his eyes wide: Abigail Williams told you it had naught to do with witchcraft!” (II, 65). This is partially because Hale has never been in this situation therefore he assumes abnormal things are normal. Listening to John Proctor, Hale is convinced that they are speaking the truth and decides to testify on behalf of Elizabeth. No longer believing Abigail he opens his eyes to a different perspective on the trials that allows him to see that those who have confessed did so to avoid the rope and those who have not, were innocent . This burden causes him to change for good. At the trial Hale begins to realize that the trials do not make sense as he says, ““Excellency, I have signed 72 death warrants; I am a minister of the Lord, and I dare not take another life without there be proof so immaculate no slightest qualm of conscience may doubt it” (III, 92). Hale using his new perspective on the trials, he begins to doubt whether those who he signed to death were really guilty and in result he refuses to sign any more lives away until he seeks the truth. As a true puritan, Hale responds by devoting himself to save lives of those who have been accused. His first attempt is to use his power and save Elizabeth from Abigail's false manipulated accusation.…

    • 948 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He is becoming more cynical and reasonable that he begins to interview the people of Salem to discover the truth. Reverend Hale goes to question the Proctors without the knowledge of the court because Goody Proctor is the ideal christian woman, but is still being prosecuted by the court on accounts of witchcraft. He confronts John Proctor to ask him if he has “ no belief that there may even be witches in the world” (Miller 40 ). This shows that Hale is worried and curious about what truly is going on. When John Proctor gets convicted in Act III due to Abigail’s transparent schemes, Hale’s confidence in witches is completely shattered. He is completely fed up with the situation and tell Judge Danforth that he will not “dare not take a life without there be a proof so immaculate no slightest qualm of conscience may doubt it” (Miller 214). He quits the court and storms out of the scene in pure anger. Knowing the misjustice going on in Salem Reverend Hale begs John Proctor to sign the statement that is a lie, but will save his life. As the novel progressed, Reverend Hale began to be more reasonable and open to other’s opinions leading him to become a vague man who is fully against the…

    • 540 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jealousy causes individuals to falsely accuse their innocent neighbors. Abigail Williams is envious of John Proctor’s wife, Elizabeth, and accuses her of witchcraft in order to resume her illicit affair with the married man. She frames Elizabeth with a poppet stabbed with a needle, which is discovered later on by Reverend Hale. She expresses her heart to John, saying, “I cannot sleep for dreamin’; I cannot dream but I wake and walk about the house as though I’d find you comin’ through the door” (23). Her expression shows her continuous hope for John to leave his wife for her. Abigail’s jealousy leads to the false accusation against Elizabeth, who is said to be hung. However, it is not only the jealousy that leads to false accusation, but pride as well.…

    • 525 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In their Puritan religion there is a law about adultery and no one shall commit it. When Hale asked Proctor to recite the Ten Commandments in the Crucible he forgot to say one…

    • 824 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Honesty In The Crucible

    • 849 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In the first part of the play, John goes to Reverend Parris’ home to see Betty, but is cornered by Abigail Williams, who was his housemaid, before being fired when his wife discovered an affair. Abigail tries to seduce John, saying she waits for him at night, but John refuses her advances leaves. Following his departure, Betty rises and begins pointing fingers at several women in village who are witches. Abigail joins in and immediately accuses John’s wife, Elizabeth. Abigail saw this as a chance to get John to herself. Later, Marry Warren, the Proctor’s current servant confesses that all of the girls were lying and pretending to be bewitched in court and John takes her in front of the Judge. When Abigail is asked if it’s true, she denies it and lead the other girls to taunt Marry mercilessly into incriminating John. He protested that the trials were a joke and the girls were faking, but his infidelity had arisen instead when he spoke of his private engagement with Abigail at the Reverend’s home. John is arrested for witchcraft. He could’ve lied and admitted to it but he remained silent, resulting in being tortured. His wife, in a last ditch effort to make John confess, tries instead to protect his name, and lies about the affair and is sentenced to hang after she gives birth. Several of the court members convince him to write a confession, but knowing the letter would be posted on the church wall compels John to…

    • 849 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After Proctor has given Judge Danforth a testament signed by many people saying Rebecca Nurse, Elizabeth Proctor, and Martha Corey are innocent and Hale is trying to convince the judges that this is evidence he says: “Excellency, I have signed seventy-two death warrants; I am a minister of the Lord, and I dare not take a life without there be a proof so immaculate no slightest qualm of conscience may doubt it. I have this morning signed away the soul of Rebecca Nurse, Your Honor. I’ll not conceal it, my hand shakes yet as with a wound! I pray you, sir, this argument let lawyers present to you.” In this quote, Reverend Hale is saying that he regrets what he has done and that the judges should listen to John Proctor. Reverend Hale also claims later in the play that the confessions are all lies just as Proctor…

    • 675 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hale comes to Salem because he is called upon by Parris, because Betty is “sick” Hale considers this to be witchcraft. Once people find out about this everything spirals out of control. The girls begin accusing and a court is formed to try the accused. Hale is part of this court, he signs death warrants. He rethinks his decision and he tells Danforth that he can not sign another warrant unless he is convinced beyond a doubt (Miller 1197). After that he storms out of the court and quits (Miller 1213). At the end he tries to help convince Danforth that the girls are lying to save Proctor. In Act 2, Hale goes to the Proctor household because he suspects the Proctor’s of witchcraft, but when people from the court come with a warrant for Elizabeth Hale tells Proctor that the court will not charge her since she is innocent and he will testify to make sure she is set free. In Act 3, Hale blames the court for not thoroughly checking to see if people are…

    • 684 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pride In The Crucible

    • 431 Words
    • 2 Pages

    John Proctor lost his life because he stayed true to his morals by not lying about using witchcraft. John would not let anybody take his pride. A man is not a man if he goes everyday regretting that he had lied. John Proctor was the type of man who would wake up every morning regretting that he had lied just so he could live. Proctor’s wife Elizabeth knows her husband better than anyone in the town of Salem. As Hale is mad that Proctor ripped the paper, Elizabeth explains to Hale that, “He have his goodness now. God forbid I take it from him” (4,784). She tells Hale that no one can take John’s pride from him.…

    • 431 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Entering these trials, Reverend Hale feels as though he is an expert on witchcraft. He is specifically called upon by Reverend Parris to diagnose his daughter and determine whether witchcraft is the cause of her illness (Act I Pg. 33-35). Although ambivalent about the nature of the child’s illness, Hale has a slight feeling of doubt that witchcraft has occurred. He understands that the townspeople are trying to lead him with false pretenses and mass hysteria toward the conclusion that witchcraft has occurred. He begins to see a weakness in the townspeople of Salem and tries not to let hearsay accusations be the support for his verdict.…

    • 994 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    anonymous

    • 474 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Late Latin anonymus, from Greek anōnymos, from a- + onyma name — more at name…

    • 474 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays