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The
  Crucible
By Arthur
  Miller
Defining a “crucible”
   Crucible:
       A container for melting something
       Testing circumstances: a place or set of
        circumstances where people or things are
        subjected to forces that test them
Abigail Williams
   Orphaned niece of Reverend
    Parris
   She is extremely jealous of
    Elizabeth Proctor and uses her
    power in the town to rid herself
    of people who have insulted
    her in the past.
   She is the leader of the girls.
John Proctor
   Husband to Elizabeth
   He knows that the girls are
    pretending but cannot
    convince the town
   An individual and critical
    thinker; strong personality
   He refuses to admit to
    witchcraft or to consider
    Abigail as anything more than
    a liar.
Elizabeth Proctor
 Wife of John Proctor
 She feels responsible for
  the withering relationship
  between her husband
  and herself.
 Described as a cold
  woman.
Tituba
   Servant to the Parris
    household
   She is a native of Barbados.
   She is enlisted by Ruth
    Putnam and Abigail to cast
    spells and create charms.
   When Abigail turns on her to
    save herself from
    punishment, Tituba
    confesses to all and saves
    herself.
Reverend Parris
   Pastor of the church in
    Salem
   He is the father of Betty and
    the uncle of Abigail Williams.
   He believes that he is being
    persecuted and that the
    townspeople do not respect
    his position as a man of God.
   Needs to prove to the
    community that he is holy.
Deputy Governor Danforth
   He seems to feel
    particularly strongly that
    the girls are honest.
   He is sensitive to the
    presence of the devil
    and reacts explosively
    to whatever evidence is
    presented.
The Girls
   Betty Parris- Daughter of the
    Reverend, cousin to Abigail
    Williams. She is a weak girl who
    goes along with her cousin as soon
    as she is threatened.
   Susanna Walcott- Easily guided by
    Abigail.
   Mercy Lewis- Servant to the Putnam
    household. She is a merciless girl
    who seems to delight in the girls'
    activities.
   Mary Warren-Servant to the Proctor
    household. She is not strong
    enough to fight Abigail.
Reverend Hale
   An expert on witches;
    wants to save the
    witches, not kill them.
   An honest man;
    intelligent.
   Feels sympathy for
    the accused.
   Starts to question the
    court.
Ethical Scenario

 You have been wrongfully accused of cheating on an
  exam. If you admit to cheating, you will serve a lunch
  detention, have the chance to take the test again,
  and have the incident recorded in your permanent
  school record. If you maintain your innocence, you
  will receive a zero on the exam and an after-school
  detention. You will not, however, be labeled a cheater
  on your school records. What are the plusses and
  minuses of each choice? Would you rather be labeled
  a cheater and receive less punishment, or defend
  your innocence and receive a larger punishment?
Describe the Reverend Paris. What
clues do you receive that he will be
   one of the villains of the play?
                   •   “villainous path”
                   •   persecution complex
                   •    no interest in children
                   •    easily insulted
Describe the life of the Puritans,
      according to Arthur Miller.
• they had no novelists
• wouldn’t allow books to
  be read
• no celebrations
• focus on prayer
• hard work kept people
  out of trouble more
  than religion
What beliefs and ideas did the
Puritans have about the woods around
               them?
• “Devil’s last preserve”
• “last place on earth that
  was not paying homage
  to God”
• they couldn’t convert the
  Natives
• “heathens” took the lives
  of their family members,
• area of mystery and
  feelings of persecution
Describe the general revenge that Miller
  speaks of in reference to the Salem
              witch hunts.
• hatred of neighbors
• land-lust
• accusing the neighbor of
  witchcraft was pious
• “old scores can be settled on a
  plane of heavenly combat
  between Lucifer and the Lord”,
• jealousy of the happiness of others
• Paris expresses concern
  for his daughter, but his
  comments to Abigail
  suggest that he has
  another motive for
  wanting to know what        • self-interested
  happened in the forest.     • concerned about his
  What does his                 reputation in the
  conversation with             village
  Abigail suggest about his
                              • he may be difficult to
  personality?
                                get along with since
                                he is on the verge of
                                losing his job
What do we learn about Abigail’s
   character, specifically in lines 131-
                 147?
• “your name in town – it
  is entirely white, is it
  not?”
• proud – will not be a
  slave to anyone
• refuses work she
  considers below her
• troublemaker – can’t
  find a job
• How are Betty Paris and
  Ruth Putnam behaving?
  What do the
  townspeople think
  about their trance?
• What did Reverend
  Paris see in the woods?
Describe the Putnams.
• Mrs. Putnam is a “twisted • Vindictive = had a man jailed
  soul”, “death-ridden” and    for debts he didn’t owe
  “haunted by dreams”          because he got the minister
                               job. Putnam thought the
• Believes in the              village wronged his family.
  accusations of witchcraft • Tried to change his father’s
  and blames witches for       will, by force.
  the deaths of her seven    • Many of the accusations in
  children.                    Salem are in the handwriting
• Putnam is a “man with        of Thomas Putnam, or he
  many grievances”: his        was a key witness. He used
                               his daughter to point fingers
  brother in law was           at people.
  denied the minister job in
  Salem.
Why do you think Parris tries to
change the Putnams’ beliefs about
    witchcraft at this point?
                • Parris wants the
                  Putnams’ support so
                  that he won’t have to
                  leave Salem
                • he knows Putnam is a
                  bitter and vengeful man
                  that wants to ruin his
                  reputation since Parris is
                  in the job that his family
                  wanted
• Putnam continues to
  talk about witchcraft to
  ruin the name of Parris
  and his family.
• Tituba is consulted
  about the girls’ health
  because she knows
  how to talk to the dead
• Mercy Lewis’ name is
  ironic because Miller
  describes her as
  “merciless”
What does Putnam attempt to get
            Parris to do?
• admit to the gathered
  village that there are
  witches in Salem
• before accusations
  start flying; he wants
  Parris to admit the
  influence of a witch in
  his own home, to make
  a stand against the
  Devil
Describe Mary Warren. What does
    Mary want the girls to do? Why?
• subservient, naïve,
  lonely
• confess and be
  whipped for
  dancing and “the
  other things”,
  better than
  hanging for
  witchcraft. She
  only looked.
What new conclusions can you draw
about Abigail, given her comments in
lines 353-364 and what Betty reveals
             about her?
         • she drank blood, a charm to kill John
           Proctor’s wife
         • she takes charge - a natural leader
         • dominates the conversation, threatens
           the other girls if they do not support her
           story
         • cruel and intimidating - a bully
         • her family was killed by Indians as she
           watched
         • has feelings for Proctor
On the basis of Miller’s mini-essay, what
role do you think John Proctor will play:
  hero, villain, major character, minor,
               foil? Explain.
• did not tolerate       • made fools feel foolish and
  hypocrites             not much liked
                         • lies were spread in town
• even-tempered          about him
• powerful of body       •troubled soul
                         • sinner against his own
• not easily led         vision of conduct
• made up his own mind   •thinks of himself as a fraud
                         • respected and feared
                         • quiet confidence and
                         hidden force
Reread the stage directions in lines 391-
    404. What does Proctor’s facial
  expression reveal about his attitude
  toward Abigail as he first addresses
                 her?
• familiarity, jest, maybe
  flirtation                  What has caused Abigail to
• Abigail grows angry with    lose her job at the Proctor’s
  Proctor because he has      house?
  refused her need for        Why might Abigail resist
  further physical intimacy   Proctor’s decision to end the
                              affair? Do you think she really
                              loves him?
As Proctor responds to Abigail’s insults
  about Elizabeth in lines 457-463, what
  do his words and the stage directions
 suggest about his view of his marriage?
• wants to protect
  Elizabeth and his
  marriage, he scolds
  Abby, he is angry
  with himself for the
  affair
• As Betty listens to her
  father’s sermon she
  cannot hear the Lord’s • Does Miller want the
  name mentioned           audience/readers to believe
• The Putnams take it as a that Betty is indeed
  sign of witchcraft       bewitched or possessed by a
                           demonic force? Make two
                           lists: one stating reasons
                           why the audience is meant
                           to believe the girls are
                           bewitched, and the other
                           giving evidence that
                           contradicts that view.
The relationship between Francis and
 Rebecca Nurse and Thomas Putnam is
      complicated and unfriendly.
• LAND: Nurse had a         • WITCHCRAFT: Rebecca
  land war with a             and her husband are
  Putnam relative in the      well respected in the
  past; people resent his     community, but were
  social status since he      accused by Putnam’s
  rented his land and         wife and daughter.
  made enough to buy it.
• MINISTRY: Nurses
  opposed Putnam’s
  choice for minister.
In what sense do Rebecca Nurse’s
words in lines 522-530 set her apart
     from the other characters?
               • she is calm and has a
                 calming effect on Betty, who
                 quiets down in her presence;
                 the voice of reason, she uses
                 past experience rather than
                 emotion and rumor to think
                 about the girl’s illness
What do the comments from Rebecca
     and Proctor suggest about the
likelihood of their being caught up in a
        hysteria over witchcraft?

            • Rebecca and John urge Parris not to
              search for “loose spirits” (535-6), she
              pushes Proctor to stay calm and
              suggests that Parris send the
              Reverend Hale, a witch hunter, away
              to secure peace in the community.
Discuss Parris’ greed and ego.
• he demands free firewood
  even though his contract
  allows him 6 pounds to buy it
• he demanded a deed to his
  house
• concerned with money and
  possession – not religion
• feels persecuted,
• demands respect and
  threatens disobedience with
  Hell
What does Proctor criticize about
    Parris’ sermons? (lines 580-4)
• Parris preaches hell and
  damnation instead of
  about God.
• Proctor hasn’t been
  seen at church for a
  while.
• He doesn’t like the
  Reverend.
What personal conflicts are revealed
  between the villagers of Salem?
• Rebecca vs. Mrs. Putnam (over sick
  children)
• Putnam vs. Proctor (regarding Proctor’s
  spiritual condition)
• Proctor vs. Parris (regarding Parris’s
  preaching style)
• Giles vs. Parris (regarding Parris’s salary
  and benefits)
• John Proctor is accused
  leading a faction against
  Parris
• Putnam believes John is
  taking wood from land
  that belongs to Putnam
• (Putnam believes he got
  the land from his
  grandfather’s will, when
  in fact the grandfather
  never owned it to give it
  away. Proctor bought it
  off the Nurses).
Describe Giles Corey. What is he
      known for in town?
                • he is famous for bringing
                  charges against his
                  neighbors
                • he believes they are
                  always telling lies about
                  him and sues them for
                  defamation of character
                  – usually without proof
What can you infer about Proctor’s
   personality and attitudes from his
          remark in line 646?
• not easily led by others –
  especially if he disagrees with
  their morality
• he does not like people who
  abuse power in an attempt to
  control others
• he is not afraid to say what
  he thinks – even if it seems
  rebellious
What is dangerous about Proctor’s
           behavior?
                 • his individualism
                   can get him in
                   trouble, since it
                   is not valued in
                   the community
Describe Mr. Hale.
•   eager-eyed intellectual
•    proud of his errand – witch hunting
•    considers himself a specialist
•   happy to use his knowledge publicly
•   studies the invisible world
•    believes in the underworld and Lucifer’s minions
•    not one of his lines has ever made the audience laugh
•   considers himself superior to the villagers
•    his goal is light and goodness
•    is supposed to be impartial
The Devil according to Miller:
•   Cosmology is divided into the          •   Political ideas (such as
    works of God and the works of the          communism and anti-
    Devil (morality vs. sin)                   communism) are described as
•                                              holly or hellish. Political
    Until Christianity, good and evil,         acceptance of communism is an
    positive and negative were part of         alliance with Red hell, inhumane,
    the same continuum/force.                  diabolically malevolent.
    Underworld was never a hostile
    area, just the death side of life. All •   People’s fear of the Devil was
    gods were useful. Christianity             used to force obedience to
    necessitated the idea of man’s             authority
    worthlessness until redeemed, and •        “The Devil is a wily one, and, until
    created the Devil as a weapon to           an hour before he fell, even God
    whip men into surrender.                   thought him beautiful in Heaven”
•   Devil used politically; rebels of          – hard to discover the motivations
    history were accused of having             of people’s actions, can’t always
    communed with the Devil                    predict what people will do
                                           •   Our opposites are always robed in
                                               sexual sin
Why does Miller believe that there
    was Devil worship in Salem?
• women indulged in
  communities of women
• selected young men to
  love in the woods
• worshiped the gods of
  fun and pleasure
  because they were
  denied any power
• Hale appears on the scene with
  heavy books, weighed down with
  authority.
• They will back up the opinions of
  Hale in regard to witchcraft
• He recognize Rebecca Nurse
  because she looks like a good soul
  should - her works of charity are
  known in his town
• Hale will not be quick to believe the
  charges of witchcraft
   – is called a “sensible man”
   – he asks for his judgment to be accepted
     by the town, even if he rules against
     witchcraft
   – says they should not go by superstition
     and look to the precise marks of the
     devil (lines 751-6))
What do you find about the reason
 Ruth (Mrs. Putnam’s daughter) was
attempting to communicate with her
            dead sisters?
     • she was sent by Mrs. Putnam to instruct
       Tituba to communicate with the dead so
       that Mrs. Putnam can find out who
       murdered her babies – hypocritical: use a
       witch to look for witchcraft; Mrs. Putnam is
       willing to use witchcraft to her own benefit
How does Miller describe Giles Corey?
• early 80s                 • he claims that his wife
• a comic hero                reads strange books and
• a scapegoat that was        that he cannot say his
  blamed for lots – missing   prayers when she does
  cows and fires              this
• innocent and brave
• didn’t care for public
  opinion
• only started praying
  recently when he married
  Martha
Pay attention to Hale’s questioning of
      Betty (leading the witness)
• Hale puts in the mind of
  Betty (and possibly the
  other bystanders) in
  regard to being afflicted
  by witches
   – tells Betty that the spirit
     afflicting her does not have
     to be a man or woman, it
     can be animal and invisible
     to others
   – leads the way for the use
     of spectral evidence during
     the trials)
Hysteria
 • Hale helps to create the
   hysteria about witches that is
   starting to sweep through
   Salem
    – pressures the girls so they feel
      trapped and start looking to
      shift the attention onto
      someone else
Abigail’s responses
• The kettle that was          • Abigail says Tituba made
  present during the dancing     her drink blood and laugh
  in the forest was for soup     in church
• Frog “jumped in, we never
  put it in”
• Abi turns on Tituba to shift
  attention, since Tituba is
  an easy target as a slave
                                Why do you think Abi laughs in
  and Barbados native -         church?
  she’s already an outcast in
  the community and
  thought of as different and
A confession was supposed
                        Tituba    to be a wish to come to
                                  Heaven’s side, so those that
• Parris threatens a lethal       confessed were spared (but
  whipping if she doesn’t         were liars in the eyes of God,
                                  and therefore damned to Hell
  confess                         after death).
• Putnam threatens to hang her
• she is blessed by the priests
  and encouraged to name
  others - assured safety and
  help
• Hale says she is God’s
  instrument and her mission is
  to help cleanse the village –
  makes her feel important and
  appeals to her vanity
• Putnam suggests the names of Goody Osborn
  and Sarah Good.
• Tituba just tells them what they want to hear.
• Abigail and Betty take advantage of the
  situation to make sure they will not be
  blamed for dancing in the forest
   – begin to call out names, Abigail says she signed the
     Devils book but wants to go back to Jesus, her
     previous irreligious behavior is ascribed to
     witchcraft – not her criticism and lack of faith
• Hale gives them confidence and authority by
  saying they are doing God’s work
• The more afraid these characters are of being
  persecuted and punished the more willing
  they are to implicate others
What are Tituba’s true feelings toward
 Parris? How do we find them out?



                 • she claims the Devil wanted
                   her to kill Parris because he is
                   mean, no goodly man, not
                   gentle – she hates him
What do the characters in the play
        believe about witches?
• exist and are the agents
  of the Devil
• can control people and
  charm children
• can take the form of
  animals

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"The Crucible" Act One (clear)

  • 1. The Crucible By Arthur Miller
  • 2. Defining a “crucible”  Crucible:  A container for melting something  Testing circumstances: a place or set of circumstances where people or things are subjected to forces that test them
  • 3. Abigail Williams  Orphaned niece of Reverend Parris  She is extremely jealous of Elizabeth Proctor and uses her power in the town to rid herself of people who have insulted her in the past.  She is the leader of the girls.
  • 4. John Proctor  Husband to Elizabeth  He knows that the girls are pretending but cannot convince the town  An individual and critical thinker; strong personality  He refuses to admit to witchcraft or to consider Abigail as anything more than a liar.
  • 5. Elizabeth Proctor  Wife of John Proctor  She feels responsible for the withering relationship between her husband and herself.  Described as a cold woman.
  • 6. Tituba  Servant to the Parris household  She is a native of Barbados.  She is enlisted by Ruth Putnam and Abigail to cast spells and create charms.  When Abigail turns on her to save herself from punishment, Tituba confesses to all and saves herself.
  • 7. Reverend Parris  Pastor of the church in Salem  He is the father of Betty and the uncle of Abigail Williams.  He believes that he is being persecuted and that the townspeople do not respect his position as a man of God.  Needs to prove to the community that he is holy.
  • 8. Deputy Governor Danforth  He seems to feel particularly strongly that the girls are honest.  He is sensitive to the presence of the devil and reacts explosively to whatever evidence is presented.
  • 9. The Girls  Betty Parris- Daughter of the Reverend, cousin to Abigail Williams. She is a weak girl who goes along with her cousin as soon as she is threatened.  Susanna Walcott- Easily guided by Abigail.  Mercy Lewis- Servant to the Putnam household. She is a merciless girl who seems to delight in the girls' activities.  Mary Warren-Servant to the Proctor household. She is not strong enough to fight Abigail.
  • 10. Reverend Hale  An expert on witches; wants to save the witches, not kill them.  An honest man; intelligent.  Feels sympathy for the accused.  Starts to question the court.
  • 11. Ethical Scenario  You have been wrongfully accused of cheating on an exam. If you admit to cheating, you will serve a lunch detention, have the chance to take the test again, and have the incident recorded in your permanent school record. If you maintain your innocence, you will receive a zero on the exam and an after-school detention. You will not, however, be labeled a cheater on your school records. What are the plusses and minuses of each choice? Would you rather be labeled a cheater and receive less punishment, or defend your innocence and receive a larger punishment?
  • 12. Describe the Reverend Paris. What clues do you receive that he will be one of the villains of the play? • “villainous path” • persecution complex • no interest in children • easily insulted
  • 13. Describe the life of the Puritans, according to Arthur Miller. • they had no novelists • wouldn’t allow books to be read • no celebrations • focus on prayer • hard work kept people out of trouble more than religion
  • 14. What beliefs and ideas did the Puritans have about the woods around them? • “Devil’s last preserve” • “last place on earth that was not paying homage to God” • they couldn’t convert the Natives • “heathens” took the lives of their family members, • area of mystery and feelings of persecution
  • 15. Describe the general revenge that Miller speaks of in reference to the Salem witch hunts. • hatred of neighbors • land-lust • accusing the neighbor of witchcraft was pious • “old scores can be settled on a plane of heavenly combat between Lucifer and the Lord”, • jealousy of the happiness of others
  • 16. • Paris expresses concern for his daughter, but his comments to Abigail suggest that he has another motive for wanting to know what • self-interested happened in the forest. • concerned about his What does his reputation in the conversation with village Abigail suggest about his • he may be difficult to personality? get along with since he is on the verge of losing his job
  • 17. What do we learn about Abigail’s character, specifically in lines 131- 147? • “your name in town – it is entirely white, is it not?” • proud – will not be a slave to anyone • refuses work she considers below her • troublemaker – can’t find a job
  • 18. • How are Betty Paris and Ruth Putnam behaving? What do the townspeople think about their trance? • What did Reverend Paris see in the woods?
  • 19. Describe the Putnams. • Mrs. Putnam is a “twisted • Vindictive = had a man jailed soul”, “death-ridden” and for debts he didn’t owe “haunted by dreams” because he got the minister job. Putnam thought the • Believes in the village wronged his family. accusations of witchcraft • Tried to change his father’s and blames witches for will, by force. the deaths of her seven • Many of the accusations in children. Salem are in the handwriting • Putnam is a “man with of Thomas Putnam, or he many grievances”: his was a key witness. He used his daughter to point fingers brother in law was at people. denied the minister job in Salem.
  • 20. Why do you think Parris tries to change the Putnams’ beliefs about witchcraft at this point? • Parris wants the Putnams’ support so that he won’t have to leave Salem • he knows Putnam is a bitter and vengeful man that wants to ruin his reputation since Parris is in the job that his family wanted
  • 21. • Putnam continues to talk about witchcraft to ruin the name of Parris and his family. • Tituba is consulted about the girls’ health because she knows how to talk to the dead • Mercy Lewis’ name is ironic because Miller describes her as “merciless”
  • 22. What does Putnam attempt to get Parris to do? • admit to the gathered village that there are witches in Salem • before accusations start flying; he wants Parris to admit the influence of a witch in his own home, to make a stand against the Devil
  • 23. Describe Mary Warren. What does Mary want the girls to do? Why? • subservient, naïve, lonely • confess and be whipped for dancing and “the other things”, better than hanging for witchcraft. She only looked.
  • 24. What new conclusions can you draw about Abigail, given her comments in lines 353-364 and what Betty reveals about her? • she drank blood, a charm to kill John Proctor’s wife • she takes charge - a natural leader • dominates the conversation, threatens the other girls if they do not support her story • cruel and intimidating - a bully • her family was killed by Indians as she watched • has feelings for Proctor
  • 25. On the basis of Miller’s mini-essay, what role do you think John Proctor will play: hero, villain, major character, minor, foil? Explain. • did not tolerate • made fools feel foolish and hypocrites not much liked • lies were spread in town • even-tempered about him • powerful of body •troubled soul • sinner against his own • not easily led vision of conduct • made up his own mind •thinks of himself as a fraud • respected and feared • quiet confidence and hidden force
  • 26. Reread the stage directions in lines 391- 404. What does Proctor’s facial expression reveal about his attitude toward Abigail as he first addresses her? • familiarity, jest, maybe flirtation What has caused Abigail to • Abigail grows angry with lose her job at the Proctor’s Proctor because he has house? refused her need for Why might Abigail resist further physical intimacy Proctor’s decision to end the affair? Do you think she really loves him?
  • 27. As Proctor responds to Abigail’s insults about Elizabeth in lines 457-463, what do his words and the stage directions suggest about his view of his marriage? • wants to protect Elizabeth and his marriage, he scolds Abby, he is angry with himself for the affair
  • 28. • As Betty listens to her father’s sermon she cannot hear the Lord’s • Does Miller want the name mentioned audience/readers to believe • The Putnams take it as a that Betty is indeed sign of witchcraft bewitched or possessed by a demonic force? Make two lists: one stating reasons why the audience is meant to believe the girls are bewitched, and the other giving evidence that contradicts that view.
  • 29. The relationship between Francis and Rebecca Nurse and Thomas Putnam is complicated and unfriendly. • LAND: Nurse had a • WITCHCRAFT: Rebecca land war with a and her husband are Putnam relative in the well respected in the past; people resent his community, but were social status since he accused by Putnam’s rented his land and wife and daughter. made enough to buy it. • MINISTRY: Nurses opposed Putnam’s choice for minister.
  • 30. In what sense do Rebecca Nurse’s words in lines 522-530 set her apart from the other characters? • she is calm and has a calming effect on Betty, who quiets down in her presence; the voice of reason, she uses past experience rather than emotion and rumor to think about the girl’s illness
  • 31. What do the comments from Rebecca and Proctor suggest about the likelihood of their being caught up in a hysteria over witchcraft? • Rebecca and John urge Parris not to search for “loose spirits” (535-6), she pushes Proctor to stay calm and suggests that Parris send the Reverend Hale, a witch hunter, away to secure peace in the community.
  • 32. Discuss Parris’ greed and ego. • he demands free firewood even though his contract allows him 6 pounds to buy it • he demanded a deed to his house • concerned with money and possession – not religion • feels persecuted, • demands respect and threatens disobedience with Hell
  • 33. What does Proctor criticize about Parris’ sermons? (lines 580-4) • Parris preaches hell and damnation instead of about God. • Proctor hasn’t been seen at church for a while. • He doesn’t like the Reverend.
  • 34. What personal conflicts are revealed between the villagers of Salem? • Rebecca vs. Mrs. Putnam (over sick children) • Putnam vs. Proctor (regarding Proctor’s spiritual condition) • Proctor vs. Parris (regarding Parris’s preaching style) • Giles vs. Parris (regarding Parris’s salary and benefits)
  • 35. • John Proctor is accused leading a faction against Parris • Putnam believes John is taking wood from land that belongs to Putnam • (Putnam believes he got the land from his grandfather’s will, when in fact the grandfather never owned it to give it away. Proctor bought it off the Nurses).
  • 36. Describe Giles Corey. What is he known for in town? • he is famous for bringing charges against his neighbors • he believes they are always telling lies about him and sues them for defamation of character – usually without proof
  • 37. What can you infer about Proctor’s personality and attitudes from his remark in line 646? • not easily led by others – especially if he disagrees with their morality • he does not like people who abuse power in an attempt to control others • he is not afraid to say what he thinks – even if it seems rebellious
  • 38. What is dangerous about Proctor’s behavior? • his individualism can get him in trouble, since it is not valued in the community
  • 39. Describe Mr. Hale. • eager-eyed intellectual • proud of his errand – witch hunting • considers himself a specialist • happy to use his knowledge publicly • studies the invisible world • believes in the underworld and Lucifer’s minions • not one of his lines has ever made the audience laugh • considers himself superior to the villagers • his goal is light and goodness • is supposed to be impartial
  • 40. The Devil according to Miller: • Cosmology is divided into the • Political ideas (such as works of God and the works of the communism and anti- Devil (morality vs. sin) communism) are described as • holly or hellish. Political Until Christianity, good and evil, acceptance of communism is an positive and negative were part of alliance with Red hell, inhumane, the same continuum/force. diabolically malevolent. Underworld was never a hostile area, just the death side of life. All • People’s fear of the Devil was gods were useful. Christianity used to force obedience to necessitated the idea of man’s authority worthlessness until redeemed, and • “The Devil is a wily one, and, until created the Devil as a weapon to an hour before he fell, even God whip men into surrender. thought him beautiful in Heaven” • Devil used politically; rebels of – hard to discover the motivations history were accused of having of people’s actions, can’t always communed with the Devil predict what people will do • Our opposites are always robed in sexual sin
  • 41. Why does Miller believe that there was Devil worship in Salem? • women indulged in communities of women • selected young men to love in the woods • worshiped the gods of fun and pleasure because they were denied any power
  • 42. • Hale appears on the scene with heavy books, weighed down with authority. • They will back up the opinions of Hale in regard to witchcraft • He recognize Rebecca Nurse because she looks like a good soul should - her works of charity are known in his town • Hale will not be quick to believe the charges of witchcraft – is called a “sensible man” – he asks for his judgment to be accepted by the town, even if he rules against witchcraft – says they should not go by superstition and look to the precise marks of the devil (lines 751-6))
  • 43. What do you find about the reason Ruth (Mrs. Putnam’s daughter) was attempting to communicate with her dead sisters? • she was sent by Mrs. Putnam to instruct Tituba to communicate with the dead so that Mrs. Putnam can find out who murdered her babies – hypocritical: use a witch to look for witchcraft; Mrs. Putnam is willing to use witchcraft to her own benefit
  • 44. How does Miller describe Giles Corey? • early 80s • he claims that his wife • a comic hero reads strange books and • a scapegoat that was that he cannot say his blamed for lots – missing prayers when she does cows and fires this • innocent and brave • didn’t care for public opinion • only started praying recently when he married Martha
  • 45. Pay attention to Hale’s questioning of Betty (leading the witness) • Hale puts in the mind of Betty (and possibly the other bystanders) in regard to being afflicted by witches – tells Betty that the spirit afflicting her does not have to be a man or woman, it can be animal and invisible to others – leads the way for the use of spectral evidence during the trials)
  • 46. Hysteria • Hale helps to create the hysteria about witches that is starting to sweep through Salem – pressures the girls so they feel trapped and start looking to shift the attention onto someone else
  • 47. Abigail’s responses • The kettle that was • Abigail says Tituba made present during the dancing her drink blood and laugh in the forest was for soup in church • Frog “jumped in, we never put it in” • Abi turns on Tituba to shift attention, since Tituba is an easy target as a slave Why do you think Abi laughs in and Barbados native - church? she’s already an outcast in the community and thought of as different and
  • 48. A confession was supposed Tituba to be a wish to come to Heaven’s side, so those that • Parris threatens a lethal confessed were spared (but whipping if she doesn’t were liars in the eyes of God, and therefore damned to Hell confess after death). • Putnam threatens to hang her • she is blessed by the priests and encouraged to name others - assured safety and help • Hale says she is God’s instrument and her mission is to help cleanse the village – makes her feel important and appeals to her vanity
  • 49. • Putnam suggests the names of Goody Osborn and Sarah Good. • Tituba just tells them what they want to hear. • Abigail and Betty take advantage of the situation to make sure they will not be blamed for dancing in the forest – begin to call out names, Abigail says she signed the Devils book but wants to go back to Jesus, her previous irreligious behavior is ascribed to witchcraft – not her criticism and lack of faith • Hale gives them confidence and authority by saying they are doing God’s work • The more afraid these characters are of being persecuted and punished the more willing they are to implicate others
  • 50. What are Tituba’s true feelings toward Parris? How do we find them out? • she claims the Devil wanted her to kill Parris because he is mean, no goodly man, not gentle – she hates him
  • 51. What do the characters in the play believe about witches? • exist and are the agents of the Devil • can control people and charm children • can take the form of animals