John Proctor wasn't against lying itself, he was against allowing the dead to be robbed of their due respect. While it pains him, he wants his life more than he wants to save his soul, he’d “let Rebecca go like a saint; for me [John Proctor] it is fraud!” (138, Miller). Proctor had accepted that he wouldn’t die for his values and was ready to live his life as a liar since by Puritan standards, he can not get into Heaven given his affair. He's not as morally valued as people like Rebecca Nurse, so the idea of signing a confession that would confirm them as witches to the village is something he can’t do.Some may say, that his hanging will not change who hangs, making it …show more content…
Elizabeth tells him she does "not judge you [him]. The magistrate sits in your heart that judges you [him]." (Miller, 55), yet he still feels guilt over his actions. He doesn't believe that he's ever going to be forgiven by Elizabeth and it torments him, the slightest suspicion by Elizabeth enrages him since he insists that he's an honest man. Yet by the end of the play, he accepts himself to be a liar, realizing it is only by death that he can accept Elizabeth's forgiveness. However, there are those that claim that it would’ve been better resolved if he had lived and tried to work it out. In fact, Elizabeth also felt responsible for the affair and thought “no honest love could come to me [her]” (137, Miller); they wouldn’t be able to move past the incident with both of them claiming blame and deluding themselves as to what really