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The Crucible

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Title: The Crucible


1
The Crucible
  • Part 2 Test Review

2
Act 2
3
In what way has Mary Warren changed and what
changed her?
  • Mary Warren has changed from a subservient
    household maid to a defiant, rebellious young
    woman. Her position and authority as a part of
    the Salem court system has caused this change.
    She feels like she no longer has to answer to
    Elizabeth Proctor because, if it weren't for her,
    Elizabeth would have been convicted of witchcraft
    right then and there. Therefore, she feels that
    Elizabeth owes her her life and is in no position
    to make demands.

4
How would you describe the relationship of John
and Elizabeth Proctor at the beginning of this
scene?
  • John and Elizabeth Proctor seem to have a
    somewhat strained relationship, but their
    affection for each other is still clear. John
    tries hard to please Elizabeth, but it is
    extremely difficult for him due to her
    depression. Elizabeth clearly loves her husband,
    but she has a difficult time trusting him because
    she thinks he has been unfaithful. On top of
    this, his indecision is a source of frustration
    for her. She knows what he needs to do but she is
    unable to persuade him to do it as expediently as
    she would like.

5
What is it she wants him to do?
  • Elizabeth wants John to go to Salem and reveal
    what Abigail told him about how the strange
    incidents have nothing to do with witchcraft.
    This would stop the trials and prevent the deaths
    of those accused. For John, the issue is not as
    clear-cut as Elizabeth makes it. While his
    relationship with Abigail is over, he is still
    less than exuberant about publicly debasing her.
    Going to the court would also mean involvement in
    his community, which he would prefer to avoid.

6
Why can't John prove what Abigail told him? Why
does Elizabeth pick up on this?
  • John can't prove what Abigail told him because he
    was alone with her when she said it, making him
    the only witness. Elizabeth picks up on this
    because it differs from the story John told her
    originally. It is understandable that John would
    alter the story in order to avoid hurting his
    wife, but alterations are more dangerous than
    beneficial if not used with consistency. Now he
    has hurt his wife twofold-- first by being alone
    with Abigail and second by lying about it.

7
Of what does John accuse Elizabeth?
  • John accuses Elizabeth of judging him too
    harshly. He points out the fact that she, too,
    has faults that she should correct before she
    passes judgment. This belief is strengthened by
    his quote, "Some dream I had must have mistaken
    you for God that day. But you're not, you're not,
    and let you remember it! Let you look sometimes
    for the goodness in me, and judge me not." This
    is vital later in the play when Proctor
    specifically seeks his wife's judgment. She
    admits her sins, in addition to the fact that
    judgment is not hers to give-- it is between John
    and God.

8
As he is about to whip Mary Warren, John stops
short. What was it she told him?
  • Mary Warren tells John Proctor that the saved
    Elizabeth's life at the courthouse. Her name was
    "somewhat mentioned" (as is the style during
    shady court proceedings) and Mary objected,
    saying that she had never seen any sign of
    Elizabeth's witchcraft during the time she worked
    for her.

9
Who does Elizabeth think called out her name and
why?
  • Elizabeth thinks Abigail called out her name.
    Elizabeth believes that Abigail means to take her
    place when she is dead. This may sound like the
    paranoia, but it is not far from the truth. While
    it is not made clear at this point, it is
    revealed in Act II, Scene 2 that Abigail means to
    do exactly that, thereby justifying Elizabeth's
    fears.

10
What does Elizabeth want John to do now?
  • Elizabeth wants John to go to Abigail and destroy
    once and for all any illusions she has that John
    loves her. Elizabeth feels that Abigail may be
    misinterpreting John's shame for passion, and
    this illusion causes Abigail to accuse her of
    witchcraft.

11
Why is he reluctant to do so?
  • John Proctor has a number of qualms regarding his
    character, but one of his traits that he has no
    doubt about is his honesty. John Proctor sees
    himself as an honest man and to "break the
    promise," as Elizabeth puts it, seems deceitful.
    The fact that the "promise" is to a mendacious
    young woman is irrelevant-- deceit, in whatever
    form, is against John's nature. This is another
    key concept because he will later have to decide
    whether or not to give in to dishonesty to save
    his life.

12
Why has the Rev. Hale come to their house?
  • The Rev. Hale has come to the Proctor house to
    inquire about the family's Christian nature.
    Despite Mary's statements to the contrary,
    Elizabeth has been accused of being a witch. Rev.
    Hale intends to use what he finds out in the
    court when it comes time for her to be tried.

13
When Hale says these are strange times, how
might that have applied equally to 1952?
  • In these "strange times," people who have been
    good, law-abiding citizens with little or no mark
    of blame upon them suddenly take on vile
    qualities when viewed from the eyes of their
    accusers. This was true in both 1692 and 1952.

14
As proof of witchcraft, Rev. Hale points out
that a number of people have already confessed to
being witches. What is Proctor's response?
  • Proctor's reasonable response is that people will
    confess to just about anything to save themselves
    from death. This has already been proven to be
    true in Tituba's case.

15
Who stuck the pin in Abigail's belly and why?
  • Abigail stuck the pin in her own belly and
    started screaming about it. It was all part of
    her elaborate plan to frame Elizabeth Proctor.
    The same day she prompted Mary Warren to make the
    poppet, stick a needle in it, and give it to
    Elizabeth Proctor. Abigail believes that the
    poppet, coupled with her act in court, will be
    enough to convict Elizabeth to hang.

16
To what does Hale attribute the calamity that
has befallen Salem?
  • Hale attributes the calamity to someone or
    something in the village that drew the wrath of
    God. This is a logical explanation when one
    considers that the Bible is the basis of Salem
    society. The majority of Biblical catastrophes
    are sparked by someone or something invoking the
    wrath of God (e.g. the destruction of Sodom and
    Gomorrah, the plagues on Egypt, etc.) therefore
    it only makes sense that this disaster should
    follow the same trend.

17
Why does this hit home with Proctor?
  • Rev. Hale's statement hits home with Proctor
    because it leads him to wonder if he may be the
    cause of it. He knows he has not been pure of
    heart, not is he a perfect man. He knows he
    lusted for Abigail, which in Puritan society
    might as well be the same thing as committing
    adultery-- one of the worst sins in Puritan
    society. In the back of his mind the thought
    begins to fester that perhaps his transgression
    brought this upon the village.

18
What does Mary say Abby will do if Proctor goes
into court to denounce her?
  • Mary says that Abby will charge Proctor with
    lechery if he goes to court. This would not only
    ruin his good name but would also leave him open
    to the legal punishment related to adultery.

19
What is Proctor's response?
  • Proctor's resolution is not shaken. He is
    determined to bring down Abby and save his wife,
    whatever the cost to him. He will not allow
    Abigail to have her way even if it does mean his
    reputation will be irreparably damaged.

20
Why is Mary afraid to say anything in court?
  • Mary is afraid to say anything in court because
    she knows Abby's power and recalls her threat
    vividly. Mary fears for her life, knowing that if
    Abby accuses her of witchcraft her only options
    will be to back down or face death.

21
Act 3
22
Why does Giles say that he "broke charity" with
his wife?
  • Giles says that he broke charity with his wife
    because it was his comment that led to her
    arrest. He revealed to Hale that his wife's book
    reading hindered his prayer, and this was enough
    evidence to condemn her for being a witch. Had he
    simply kept the issue between him and his wife,
    her condemnation would probably not have
    happened.

23
How has Rev. Hale changed since we last saw
him in Act 2 and John Proctor called him Pontius
Pilate?
  • Rev. Hale is no longer bold and confident in his
    search for witches. He has strong misgivings
    about the validity of the entire process. Now he
    is open, willing, and even eager to hear evidence
    that may prove that witchcraft is not present in
    Salem. Unfortunately the trials have progressed
    to such a level that he is powerless to stop
    them.

24
Why is Mary Warren's testimony critical for
Hale, Proctor, Nurse and Corey?
  • If Mary Warren can prove that the witchcraft is
    all Abigail's creation, it will free the wives of
    Proctor, Nurse, and Corey and ease Hale's
    conscience. At this point, she is the only person
    not entirely under Abigail's control who can stop
    the proceedings with few personal repercussions.
    If she succeeds, Abigail will fall from her seat
    of glory, the women will be pardoned, and things
    will be able to return to normal in Salem. If
    not, Abigail will retain her control, the women
    will eventually hang, and the madness will
    continue.

25
What does Mary Warren tell Governor Danforth?
  • Mary Warren tells Governor Danforth that her
    former actions were all pretense and that the
    other girls were acting as well. This statement
    is in direct contradiction to all her former
    actions in the courtroom.

26
Why does Proctor not drop the charges against
the court when he hears that his wife is pregnant
and will be spared for at least a year?
  • Proctor does not drop the charges against the
    court because he sees how his friends are
    suffering on account of their wives'
    condemnation. He has taken the first step into
    community involvement and solving his personal
    problems is no longer enough. Proctor knows that
    he holds the key-- he can no longer turn back.

27
Why does Proctor say that his wife must be
pregnant if she has said so?
  • Proctor states that his wife must be pregnant
    because lying is simply against her nature. This
    statement becomes vital later on in the act when
    she is interrogated in order to prove if this is
    the case or not.

28
What happens to the ninety-one people who signed
the petition in support of the accused?
  • The ninety-one people who signed the petition are
    summoned for questioning. By supporting the
    accused, regardless of her community standing,
    they are getting caught up in the web of
    accusations. These people who signed the petition
    are forced to face the unpleasant consequences of
    their community involvement.

29
What is the charge that Giles Corey makes against
Putnam?
  • Giles Corey charges Putnam for making his
    daughter cry witchery on George Jacobs. Giles
    feels that Putnam had the motivation for doing it
    because if Jacob dies, he will forfeit his
    property. Putnam is the only man in the community
    who is wealthy enough to buy that land-- a likely
    scenario considering his materialistic attitude
    revealed earlier.

30
What is Giles Corey's proof for his charge, and
why will he not supply the proof to the court?
  • Giles Corey's proof is that a friend heard Putnam
    mention the plan. Corey will not supply the name
    to the court because he already saw what happened
    to the ninety-one petitioners. He is noble enough
    to refuse to allow that fate to befall another
    friend.

31
Why does Danforth find it hard to believe that
Abigail could be pretending and, in effect, be a
murderer?
  • Danforth finds it hard to believe that Abigail
    could be pretending because, if it truly is
    witchcraft, she would be the only one who would
    know about it anyway. Witchcraft is an invisible
    crime, with the only witnesses being the witch
    and the victim. Since the witch cannot be
    expected to incriminate herself, only the victim
    can provide the evidence. As far as Danforth
    knows, Abigail may very well be tormented by
    spirits, and therefore she must be believed.

32
How does the questioning of Mary Warren differ
from the questioning of Abigail? Why?
  • Mary Warren is questioned in a way that makes it
    clear that Danforth is very skeptical-- at best--
    about her evidence. Danforth also puts Mary in a
    position that essentially damns her if she
    recants her former testimony. He reminds her that
    God damns all liars and that she will be sent to
    jail for lying now or having lied before.
    Therefore, the atmosphere that Danforth creates
    makes it extremely difficult for Mary to tell the
    truth as she knows it. On the contrary, Abigail
    is given the benefit of the doubt when she
    testifies. The judges have no choice-- her
    testimony is the basis of all the hearings. While
    Mary does not have to be believed, Abigail must
    in order to justify the incarceration of so many
    of the town's citizens.

33
Why can't Mary give a show of pretense when
asked by the court?
  • Mary can't give a show of pretense because the
    atmosphere is entirely different. When she did it
    in the court, all the other girls were doing the
    same thing and the judges were encouraging it. It
    was the acceptable thing to do-- not fainting and
    screaming would be considered improper. In the
    court, she was simply giving them what they
    wanted to see. This time, to do so would be to
    act against the girls-- the accepted authority in
    the courtroom. The judges still believe that the
    girls are acting truthfully and their attitudes
    make that clear. With her only support in the
    room being John Proctor, it is little wonder that
    Mary cannot give a show of pretense.

34
When Abigail is questioned by Danforth, how does
she respond?
  • Abigail gets extremely defensive when questioned
    by Danforth. She insists that she suffers greatly
    to fulfill her duty pointing out the Devil's
    people. She also threatens Danforth directly and
    says that the powers of Hell have the ability to
    turn even his wits. Then, in order to direct the
    negative attention elsewhere, Abigail makes
    another show of pretense and indicates Mary
    Warren is witching her.

35
In calling Abigail a whore, what charge and
punishment does Proctor open himself for? Why has
he made this confession?
  • In calling Abigail a whore, John Proctor has
    thrown away his good name and has opened himself
    for charges (and corresponding punishment) of
    lechery, one of the worst crimes in Puritan
    society. He makes this confession in hopes of
    discrediting Abigail and stopping the
    proceedings. This is a major leap into the waters
    of community involvement for John Proctor. He has
    gone to the extreme of throwing away something
    very valuable to him-- his good reputation-- in
    order to save his wife and the wives of his
    friends. He realizes that even if the witch
    trials are stopped he will still be punished for
    lechery, but the potential benefits outweigh the
    risk.

36
What test is Elizabeth given, and how does she
fail it? Why?
  • Elizabeth is asked if John ever committed
    lechery. When she doesn't answer, she is asked if
    her husband is a lecher. After hesitating and
    probably a lot of soul searching while in jail,
    she responds that he isnt. John Proctor had
    counted on her to say that he was because he knew
    she truly believed it. She did NOT know the
    purpose of the question, and by changing her
    mind, she has condemned herself, her husband, and
    her friends because the trials continue!

37
What causes Mary Warren to crack?
  • Abigail's show and corresponding charges of
    witchcraft cause Mary Warren to crack. She
    realizes that Abigail was serious in her threat
    to kill anyone who opposes her. If Mary Warren is
    accused of being a witch, she will truly hang.
    Mary knows that Abigail can provide for her
    protection and freedom while John Proctor no
    longer has anything to offer. Therefore, she
    joins Abigail and the other girls once more by
    accusing John Proctor of witchcraft.

38
On what dramatic note does Act III end?
  • Act III ends on the dramatic note of Proctor
    being accused of being a witch, and then
    declaring that God is dead and condemning the
    court. These two statements are completely
    against the Puritan religion and reinforce the
    chaos and pandemonium the trials brought to
    Salem.

39
General quotes and information
40
Authority
  • The authority of the church is supreme and if
    church members dont obey the minister, chaos
    will ensue, and the church will be destroyed.
  • Reverend Parris
  • Reverend Hale

41
Authority
  • Individual conscience is the final authority, and
    every church member has the right to say what he
    believes.
  • John Proctor

42
Hales visit reveals
  • John Proctor rarely attends church
  • One of their children is not baptized
  • John Proctor cannot say all of his commandments
  • Proctor doesnt like Parris
  • Elizabeth and Proctor do not believe that witches
    are among them

43
John Proctor as the voice of reason
  • Points out to Mary that not being able to say her
    commandments does not make Goody Good a witch
  • Its strange work for a Christian girl to hand
    old women.
  • Its hard to think so pious a woman be secretly
    a Devils bitch after seventy year of such good
    prayer.
  • In response to Hales argument that those who
    have been convicted of witchcraft have confessed
    to it, he says, And why not, if they must hang
    for denyin it?
  • Wonders if the court will believe his story when
    Hale doubts Elizabeth.

44
The charges
  • For the marvelous and supernatural murder of
    Goody Putnams babies
  • For bewitching Walcotts pigs
  • For sending her spirit to stick a needle in
    Abigail Williams
  • Rebecca Nurse
  • Martha Corey
  • Elizabeth Proctor

45
My wife is the very brick and mortar of the
church
  • Francis Nurse was saying that his wife is the
    material of which Salems religious community is
    built and the substance that holds it together.

46
what keeps you so late? Its almost dark!
  • Helps to characterize Elizabeth as suspicious of
    John Proctors actions. She thinks he has been
    to see Abigail.

47
Your justice would freeze beer.
  • Hyperbole
  • used to characterize Elizabeth as unforgiving and
    cold.

48
What victory would the devil have to win a soul
already bad?
  • Foreshadows the eventual charges
  • against respectable citizens.

49
There is a misty plot afoot so subtle we should
be criminal to cling to old respects and ancient
friendships.
  • Hale defending the witch trials when
  • Rebecca Nurse is arrested.

50
I cannot think the Devil may own a womans soul
when she keeps an upright way.
  • Represents Elizabeth Proctors view
  • about the charges of witchcraft.

51
I cannot sleep for dreamin I cannot dream but
I wake and walk about the house as though Id
find you comin through some door.
  • Demonstrates Abigails obsession with
  • John Proctor.

52
The Devil is precise the marks of his pretense
are definite as stone.
  • Ironic statement made by Hale to the people of
    Salem when he is about to ascertain whether or
    not Betty has been touched by the devil. He
    says there is specific evidence to identify the
    devils touch, but then he sets about to use
    ambiguous proof.

53
We are only what we always were, but naked now.
And the wind, Gods icy wind, will blow!
  • People are either virtuous or they are not. It
    doesnt matter whether their true nature is
    secret or common knowledge, God knows

54
Pontius Pilate! God will not let you wash your
hands of this!
  • allusion
  • By doing nothing to stop it, Hale is guilty of
    whatever happens to the accused people.

55
I have three childrenhow may I teach them to
walk like men in the world, and I sold my
friends?
  • A person must set a good example not only with
    words but also with deeds.

56
A fire is burning! I hear the boot of
Lucifer, I see his filthy face! And it is my
face, and yours, Danforth! For them that quail
to bring men out of ignorance, as I have
quailed, and as you quail now when you know in
all your black hearts that this be fraudGod
damns our kind especially, and we will burn
together!
  • When you know someone is committing a wrong, but
    you dont do anything about it, you are more
    guilty than the person who committed the wrong.
    God will surely punish you accordingly.

57
She thinks to dance with me on my wifes grave!
And well she might, for I thought of her softly.
God help me, I lusted, and there is a promise in
such sweat. But it is a whores vengeance, and
you must see it.
  • Proctor reveals Abigails motivation in
  • seeing his wife condemned.

58
Let you not mistake your duty as I mistook my
own. I came into this village like a bridegroom
to his beloved bearing gifts of high religion
the very crowns of holy law I brought, and what I
touched with my bright confidence, it died and
where I turned the eye of my great faith, blood
flowed up.
  • Hale realizes his part in the witch trials
  • and is trying to convince Elizabeth to compel
    Proctor to confess

59
Let either of you breathe a word, or the edge of
a word, about the other things, and I will come
to you in the black of some terrible night and I
will bring a pointy reckoning that will shudder
you and I can make you wish you had never seen
the sun go down!
  • When Mary and Betty want to confess, Abigail
    threatens them to ensure that she is not exposed.

60
You are a broken minister.
  • Hale has broken his covenant with God, so in
    Proctors mind, Hale no longer has any moral
    authority.

61
What profit him to bleed? Shall the dust praise
him? Shall the worms declare his truth?
  • John Proctors death is futile. There
  • is no point in it for Proctor or for anyone else.

62
He may have his goodness now, God forbid I take
it from him.
  • Elizabeth finally realizes the goodness
  • that was always within her husband, and he
    himself realizes it, too. She wont take it from
    him by trying to persuade him to falsely confess.

63
There be no higher judge under Heaven than
Proctor is!
  • Elizabeth knows that Proctor judges
  • himself more harshly than anyone else does.

64
I have been thirty-two year at the bar, sir, and
I should be confounded were I called upon to
defend these people.
  • Reveals Danforths bias toward the
  • accused. He has already decided they are guilty.

65
I come to do the Devils work. I come to
counsel Christians they should belie themselves.
  • A paradox faced by Hale when he
  • finds himself faced with encouraging the accused
    to lie to save their lives.

66
It is difficult for the individual to win in a
conflict with accepted authority
  • Francis Nurse and Giles Corey disrupt the court
  • Giles Corey refuses to name his informant
  • Proctor refuses to attend church as long as
    Parris preaches hellfire and brimstone
  • Giles Corey flaunts his knowledge of court
    preceedings
  • 91 people are arrested for attesting to the good
    character of Elizabeth, Rebecca, and Martha

67
Bias of the Court
  • The judges accept without question what the
    accusers say.
  • The officials of the court ask leading questions
    which suggest the answers the court wants to
    hear, and if they do not get the answers they
    want, they try to intimidate.
  • When someone is accused of witchcraft, the judges
    automatically place the burden of proof upon the
    accused however, when accusations other than
    witchcraft are made, the burden of proof is
    placed upon the accuser.

68
The climax of the play occurs when
  • Elizabeth Proctor tells the court her husband is
    NOT guilty of lechery.

69
Reverend Parris wishes to spare Proctors life
because
  • He fears for his life if such a respected man is
    hanged

70
Parris wants John Proctor to confess because
  • he fears for his life
  • it will cast doubt on the innocence of the
    others.
  • Proctors name carries a lot of weight in the
    town.

71
John Proctor complains about Reverend Parris
because
  • demands too much compensation, such as the deed
    to his house.
  • focuses on hell and damnation in his services.
  • wastes the church money on extravagant items.

72
Giles Coreys charge against Thomas Putnam is
significant because it illustrates
  • irony when Giles Corey is condemned for giving
    evidence that is hearsay, while equally invalid
    evidence is used to condemn persons for
    witchcraft.

73
Hale questions the Proctors Christianity because
  • John Proctor rarely attends church
  • One of their children is not baptized
  • John Proctor forgets one of the Commandments

74
John Proctor is considered the voice of reason in
Act 2 because
  • In response to Hales argument that those who
    have been convicted of witchcraft have confessed
    to it, he says, And why not, if they must hang
    for denyin it?
  • I am only wondering how I may prove what she
    told me, Elizabeth. If the girls a saint now, I
    think it is not easy to prove shes fraud
  • It may be I have been too quick to bring the man
    to book, but you cannot think we ever desired the
    destruction of religion.

75
What does John Proctor say hurt his prayer?
  • seeing his hard earned money being spent on
    golden candlesticks for the church

76
What is the setting of Act 3?
  • The Salem courtroom

77
Which incidents reveal the bias of the court?
  • The judges accept without question what the
    accusers say.
  • The officials of the court ask leading questions
    which suggest the answers the court wants to
    hear, and if they do not get the answers they
    want, they try to intimidate.
  • When someone is accused of witchcraft, the judges
    automatically place the burden of proof upon the
    accused however, when accusations other than
    witchcraft are made, the burden of proof is
    placed upon the accuser.

78
In the courtroom Danforth questions Abigail as
though he doubts her, she suddenly begins
hallucinating and freezing. What causes her
behavior to abruptly end?
  • Proctor grabs her by the hair of her head and
    jerks her to her feet, calling her a whore.

79
Elizabeth admits to her husband that she was a
cold wife for what reason (s)?
  • thought she was too plain for anyone to love.
  • Didnt know how to show her love.

80
Which characters support John Proctors decision
to falsely admit to witchcraft?
  • Reverend Parris
  • Deputy Governor Danforth
  • Reverend Hale

81
For what reasons does John Proctor contemplate
confessing?
  • Refusing to confess will not fool God nor spare
    his children hardships
  • Refusing to confess will not save his soul
  • giving the appearance of martyrdom is pretense

82
Danforth says that he will not accept Proctors
confession if it is a lie, but we know Danforth
is not being honest because
  • even though Proctor would not name others, he was
    willing to take the confession as long
  • as Proctor signed it.

83
Why does Proctor retract his confession?
  • the officials demand that he sign his name to it.

84
Dramatic Irony
  • Hales statement to Proctor that the world goes
    mad, and it profit nothing you should lay the
    cause to the vengeance of a little girl
  • is dramatic irony because while he suggests
    that it is foolish to blame what has happened on
    the vengeance of a little girl, the audience
    knows that is the precise cause.

85
Parriss statement that I do not preach for
childrenIt is not the children who are unmindful
of their obligations toward this ministry, is
ironic because
  • Parris sees no reason to instruct the children
    about God, yet it is the young girls who are
    trying to commune with the devil and in an effort
    to conceal their misbehavior, they set in motion
    the events that will destroy Salem.

86
Rev. Hales statement, What victory would the
Devil have to win a soul already bad? It is the
best the Devil wants, and who is better than a
minister? is ironic because
  • He assumes that the minister must be the best
    person in the village, but the facts show that
    Parris is not a good man.

87
What is ironic about Hales statement to Tituba,
You are Gods instrument put in our hands to
discover the Devils agents among us
  • Instead of saving the village from the Devil, he
    is persuading her to make false accusations of
    witchcraft against innocent people.
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