“ I have given you my soul, leave me my name.” This is a quote said by John Proctor in The Crucible. John was getting ready to be hung and he ripped up the confession when he said this. John was a man in his 30’s who farmed in salem. John was a respected man. He also did not go to church often. He was not fond of Rev. Parris. John Proctor and I have very similar personality traits in that we are hardworking, outcast, and respectful. The first trait that John Proctor and I share that we are hardworking men. John plows the fields on Sundays. Plowing his fields lets him get ahead in his work. Even though church is on sundays, John stays home because his work and crops are more important to him. I can relate to John because even though I'm suppose to be taking a break every now and then I'm always on my feet working on something. I was suppose to go to my grandma's for her birthday, but I stayed home to work on the gas tank of my brothers truck. When working I take my time to do it right and think through how it will work out like John Proctor he is ahead because, he does his work and takes the time he feels he needs. …show more content…
John Proctor is an outcast because he doesn't go to church. John stays home to plow the fields on sunday which most people don't do. He also lives away from the village. I'm an outcast because, I say things others would never say. I find weird things to say to people to either freak them out or make em laugh and feel weird. Im also an outcast because I try to avoid talking to a lot of people. I only have a few friends I like to talk too. Other people I find annoying and distrustworthy. John and I are a little bit of outcasts because we avoid people for personal
A Tragic hero is a character who experiences a major downfall as the results of a personal mistake or the workings of fate. There are many tragic heroes in the play The Crucible, But the one that comes to mind is John Proctor for several reasons. It all starts out with the affair with Abigail, when that affair happens John Proctor breaks his wedding vows and violate the moral convictions of the community by engaging in an adultery affair with Abigail. John Proctor is a classic example of a tragic hero in the play, The Crucible for several reasons…
“Abby, I may think of you softly from time to time. But I will cut off my hand before I’ll ever reach for you again,” happens to be a quote from John Proctor whilst he was speaking to Abigail Williams in Act One of The Crucible. John Proctor happens to be a hard-working farmer from Salem with strong Puritan beliefs. Although John is a religious Puritan man he has some downfalls within the play The Crucible. His first downfall would be him committing adultery with a seventeen year old named Abigail Williams, who was his servant at the time. After committing said adultery with the teenage girl, he keeps it a secret from his wife until she fires Abigail and kicks her out of their house. After that his wife is accused of being a witch by Abigail because of him not wanting to be with Abigail anymore. He finally tells the truth about the affair while in court and is accused of being a witch after screaming “God is dead,” he then was hung three months later. So, if there is one character I can most closely relate myself to it would be John Proctor. Three character traits that I share with John Proctor is that we are both honest, hard-working, and caring.
In 1692, witchcraft was known as an evil sin to be commited on Earth, if accused of witchcraft, trial and execution was likely to happen and proceeded to happen to many innocent people. One well-known accussal was that of John Proctor. Proctor had committed adultery with Abigail Williams, a previous maid of the Proctor house, and once coming clean for his sin, in turn of events backfires and is accused of witchcraft. John Proctor is seen as a protagonist of the story full of courage and boldness when fighting for his life and good name in court. At the time, all possible outcomes were not at the top of his head but then he had to go through twists and turns to save his wife, Elizabeth, as well as himself. In The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, John Proctor's character traits is shown to be a cheater, fearless, and courageous. Therefore, John Proctor's character can be portrayed through the song "Womanizer" by
Most places in the Massachusetts Colonies judged people’s power in the community by how much land one owned. “You cannot command Mr. Parris. We vote name in the society, not by acreage” (Miller 1249). This explains why John will not sign his name away, because he does not want his future generations to be soiled by what the deeds accused upon him. This is why he is a great man and a hero. He puts others before himself and he dies for to keep his name pure. Upon explaining to Danforth why he will not sign away his good name, Proctor proclaims, “A man will not cast away his good name. You surely know that” (Miller 1309). He is committed to keeping his name good. Proctor made the mistake of adultery, but he believes that it is not fair for his future generations to hold his own burden. Nothing is more important than his name, and proves why he is a good
Arthur Miller introduces a dynamic character, John Proctor, in his play The Crucible. John, known for his loyalty and detest of hypocrisy, is involved in the adulterous action of cheating on his wife Elizabeth with their housekeeper, Abigail. The question of if John Proctor is a tragic hero surfaces as his downfall is followed by the very truth of his hidden affair. In Miller’s essay, Tragedy and the Common Man, he challenges the basic definition of a tragic hero and explains how the common man could be in the category of a hero. Based on Miller’s arguments, it is apparent that John Proctor encounters the situations that makes someone a tragic hero, and therefore can be considered one.
John Proctor is seen to be a very prideful and stubborn character. He is also mean-spirited when he speaks to Mary Warren about her whereabouts. But Mary has a new threshold of power, that she knows she can use against Proctor. Mary is an official of the court and aware of Proctor’s affair with Abigail. Proctor is also aware of Mary’s power and cannot deny her of it.
Hanged by the Dozen People are judged everyday, and it is these judgements that can cause the murders of those who are innocent. In The Crucible by Arthur Miller, innocent people are convicted of being witches and hanged for this crime. This story is about John Proctor who is hanged because he tries to save the innocent citizens who are convicted of being witches. Similarly, in “Half Hanged Mary” by Margaret Atwood, Mary Webster is convicted of being a witch and survives the hanging. The poem goes on to talk about her inner thoughts while she is in the midsts of hanging.
After being tried and condemned to death, John refuses to confess. But he doesn’t want to die because of some witches that are just making lies. So he signs the paper that is going to be nailed to the church door saying he has committed sins. He asks himself “God in heaven, what is John Proctor, what is John Proctor.” He is asking if John Proctor is considered honest or a liar. Because he knows he did nothing wrong in his life but he is accused and no one wants to believe him. But he shortly takes back his claim and refuses to sign it because he doesn’t want his friends being condemned for his actions, “I speak my own sins, I cannot judge another. I have no tongue for it.” So by doing so he answers part of the question “What is John Proctor” by coming forth on his own view of himself. John Proctor cannot live with the lie if he had signed that confession, so he will die by his own honesty.
People’s true character is revealed through their actions. Their morals and ethics can be told from how they choose to act in a situation. In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible; the character of John Proctor is an honorable man despite having committed wrongful acts. He was able to redeem himself through acts that is considered courageous, such as when he refuses to contribute to the lie of witchcraft in Salem, when he fights for the people who were convicted of witchcraft and when he regrets being a dishonest man.
In The Crucible the characters all show different kind of growth throughout the story. The story is based of a town called Salem and when the Devil hit Salem all the people started to turn on each other. What started of as a little joke between girls turned into a whole game for them to play. The girls accused anyone they saw or anyone that did them wrong and each and every time those same people were hanged. Although, this play is mostly about the witchcraft the people also changed as time went by and they started to understand what was happening and why it was wrong.
In the play, Arthur Miller wrote called, The Crucible John Proctor says "Because it is my name! Because I cannot have another in my life! How may I live without my name? I have given you my soul; leave me my name!” (Miller 143). He had a very strong belief that if his name was blackened there is no reason to live. John Proctor also chose to die because he could not double cross his friends, the fact that he has three children, John could not raise his children to walk like men in the world if he himself was not a true man. Therefore, for the sake of his name, reputation, and his kids John's decision to die was a heroic one.
To begin with, Proctor was considered a strong person in the community, and he was respected for it. He was a handsome, hard-working, and
John isn't really like most people in Salem, he doesn’t fit in. Proctor might be noted as an outcast because he isn't as holy as everybody else in his community. Some find it strange that he plays on Sundays. In some ways I also feel like an outcast being so tall, towering over people.
He demonstrates all of a hero’s characteristics in some way or another. Although not upper class, he is still an upstanding member of the community. He is well respected and looked up to by those around him. As Miller describes him, “Proctor, respected and even feared in Salem, has come to regard himself as a kind of fraud.” (1098) He believes himself to be a fraud because of his tragic flaw: the affair with Abigail Williams. That affair is Proctor’s one weakness, and no one knows about it besides John, his wife, Elizabeth, and Abby. Another characteristic of a tragic hero is that he must be involved in some kind of struggle. Proctor is involved in two different struggles. One is the personal struggle between him and his wife. Elizabeth knows of his lechery and has a hard time forgiving him. Proctor tries to convince her of his love and faithfulness, but it is almost impossible. The other struggle Proctor faces is the social struggle that is going on throughout the whole town. The witchcraft hysteria has overtaken Salem, and Proctor struggles to stand out as an honest opposer of the hangings even though it may lead to his own downfall.
Arthur Miller also conveys through John Proctor that it is acceptable to stand up to unjust authority. These traits that the character John Proctor possesses are what qualify him to be a tragic hero.