Saturday, July 20, 2019
The Crucible: Characters :: Essay on The Crucible
 The Crucible: Characters    Chetan Patel         The Crucible, a play by Arthur Miller that was first produced in 1953,  is based on the true story of the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. Miller wrote the  play to parallel the situations in the mid-twentieth century of Alger Hiss,  Owen Latimore, Julius and Ethel Rosenburg, and Senator McCarthy, if only  suggestively. (Warshow 116) Some characters in the play have specific agendas  carried out by their accusations, and the fact that the play is based on  historical truth makes it even more intriguing.       The characters in this play are simple, common people. The accused are  charged and convicted of a crime that is impossible to prove. The following  witchcraft hysteria takes place in one of America's wholesome, theocratic towns,  which makes the miscarriage of justice such a mystery even today. The reasons  the villains select the people they do for condemnation are both simple and  clear. All of the accusers have ulterior motives, such as revenge, greed, and  covering up their own behavior. Many of the accusers have meddled in witchcraft  themselves, and are therefore doubly to be distrusted. (Warshow 116) The court  convicts the victims on the most absurd testimony, and the reader has to wonder  how the judges and the townspeople could let such a charade continue.       The leading character of the play is John Proctor, a man who often  serves as the only voice of reason in the play. He had an affair with Abigail  Williams, who later charges his wife with witchcraft. Proctor is seemingly the  only person who can see through the children's accusations. The reader sees him  as one of the more "modern" figures in the trials because he is hardheaded,  skeptical, and a voice of common sense. He thinks the girls can be cured of  their "spells" with a good whipping. (Warshow 114) At the end of the play,  Proctor has to make a choice. He can either confess to a crime he is innocent  of to save himself from execution, or die proclaiming his innocence. He ends up  choosing death because a false confession would mean implicating other accused  people, including Rebecca Nurse. (Rovere 2632) Proctor feels she is good and  pure, unlike his adulterous self, and does not want to tarnish her good name and  the names of his other innocent friends by implicating them. (Warshow 117) By  choosing death, Proctor takes the high road and becomes a true tragic hero. The  reader feels that his punishment is unjust (especially since the crime of  witchcraft is imagined and unprovable.) Because the trials take place in a  Christian, American town, the reader must then wonder if anything like this    					    
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