His immense pride and fear of public opinion compelled him to withhold his adultery from the court, but by the end of the play he is more concerned with his personal integrity than his public reputation. He still wants to save his name, but for personal and religious, rather than public, reasons. Such a confession would dishonor his fellow prisoners, who are brave enough to die as testimony to the truth.
Perhaps more relevantly, a false admission would also dishonor him, staining not just his public reputation, but also his soul. By refusing to give up his personal integrity Proctor implicitly proclaims his conviction that such integrity will bring him to heaven. He goes to the gallows redeemed for his earlier sins. God forbid I take it from him!
By acting like this he has made some enemies in Salem. Proctor had noticed that Parris was not only interested in the well-being of his parish but very much more in his material wealth and his reputation in the community. He is not convinced that people should do what the priest tells them without thinking about it. Religion and society have surely left their mark on John Proctor, but his mind is free and so he lets himself get involved in discussions with Parris or Putnam, for example, and that is also a reason why he got into the mess with Abigail.
A strictly religiously living man would possibly not have made this mistake, but John has certainly had a more interesting life than the average citizen of Salem. He is a man with a temper and is willing to use the whip when you deserve it, but you can say he is full of goodness. He is very generous, helps his neighbours and is an attractive man, powerful of body and well-built. His appearance and passionate nature make him such an attractive person for women.
He loves his wife Elizabeth so much that he even tells her about the affair with Abigail, but he is also disgusted with himself. He is ashamed that he lay his hands on Abigail, and this affair has ruined his inner peace. Ever since then he has had a difficult relationship with his wife and he lives in an endless conflict with himself; he wants to be the man he was before, but he thinks he is a fraud. The affair with Abigail happened when Elizabeth was ill and Proctor looked for some warmth in his house, so things developed to the inevitable end.
He wants to know what is wrong with Betty because the town is murmuring witchcraft. At this moment we can only assume that she loves him, but we do not know anything about his feelings for her. That is the evidence that they had an affair and we also see that John does not want to continue the relationship. After he had confessed it to Elizabeth, she dismissed her from her service and because she did not want to tell the people in Salem that the reason was the affair between John and Abigail, she said that Abigail had dissatisfied her, that she was lazy and things like that, so her name was not spotless in town any more.
Consequently Abigail was angry with Elizabeth and wanted to make life difficult for her whenever she could.
And for a man in his situation it is quite understandable because Abigail is an attractive young woman and his wife Elizabeth has been cold and bitter since she got to know about the affair. Elizabeth is a person who is able to hide her feelings, she does not show any warmth to Proctor, she still cooks and cares for the household, but they do not live together as a married couple or as lovers, they just live in the same house.
He does not want to hurt her and maybe if he were not married with Elizabeth, he would take Abigail as his lover, so maybe he wants to keep on being on good terms with her. His wife Elizabeth rejects him because she is very disappointed in him as a husband, she does not trust him any more.
But she truly loves him, she does not tell other people in town about it and in the end we see how she acts against her own strict code of always saying the truth. But if she had always shown him how much she loved him, he probably would not have approached Abigail. So maybe she also feels responisble for his adultery and now she punishes herself, too by punishing him with her coldness. So she accuses Elizabeth of sending her spirits out on her because she wants to get rid of her.
When the witch-hunters knock on their door, John and Elizabeth have to support each other and in this situation they start to have a conversation about his infidelity. Learn charity, woman. When Cheever comes to take Elizabeth to jail, John and Elizabeth forget all their problems and defend each other when they are accused of being not a Christian family that believes in prayer; they also are reproached that they rarely go to church and that John ploughs on Sunday.
This is the first time that John gets to know that there are trials in Salem, because he knows the truth and could not imagine that Abigail had not told the truth. Obviously Abigail is very unscrupulous, she even is willing to hurt herself in order to harm somebody else.
But it shows, too how much she loves John and what he really means to her. Which can be counted in wearing two set of faces. It is also noteworthy that when Abigail reveals that they were merely dancing and there is no such a thing as witchcraft, Proctor replies while widening his smile,.
Ah, you're wicked yet aren't y'! This is a clear indication that Proctor is greatly impressed by the hypocritical behaviour of Abigail. But acting so makes him a hypocrite throughout the play? Well, not exactly! He reveals about his adulterous relation in the court so that he may get his wife out of the prison.
Act III is the time where Proctor is put into a difficult position that he must face. He must confess in order to save his wife, and in order for him to do that he must confess he had an affair with Abigail. We see that Proctor is able to confess to the court, but the judges still believe in the girls hysteria. One of the accused was a man named John Proctor. While he was a respected farmer and member of the community, he had committed adultery with one of the accusers, Abigail Williams.
By playing her Mafia-like wailing and doll piercing games and forcing the other Salem girl to participate, Abigail determines to terminate Elizabeth and keep John for herself In the play The Crucible written by Arthur Miller, John Proctor was internally triumphant when he gained respect for himself, primarily due to his mission of personal redemption and his integrity.
Overwrought by regret of his actions, John Proctor is driven on a mission to personally prove himself. He realizes the enormous mistake of committing lechery with Abigail, and wants to prove to himself he has a good will. The play explains an outbreak in a village in which a Puritan society using a theocracy government convicts hundreds on the word of a few girls, falsely accusing townspeople of witchcraft, therefore bringing havoc to the town and John seeks to end the lies of the main antagonist, Abigail.
In the second act, John Proctor acts very aggressive towards others and commits cruel acts in the name of his Puritan village showing a lack of good moral values as well as respect for others.
I have known her. These words spoken by John Proctor reveal he did wrong by cheating on his wife and acknowledges the sin he has committed. Proctor is a farmer in his thirties who has 3 kids as described in the book. John Proctor is living during the time of the puritans and the bad Salem witch trials. The author of The Crucible ,Arthur Miller wrote this play as a symbol for another event.
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