Sunday, February 5, 2017
The Crucible - Proctor: An Honorable Man
  In Arthur Millers The Crucible, the author depicts puritan capital of Oregon and the witch trials of 1692, revealing the  put in of hysteria and intolerance on a community. Through the  spirit of John  watch, Millers purpose is revealed. John  monitoring device goes from  macrocosm an ignorant, innocent bystander to a passionate, unyielding soldier which shows the  inwardness that dignity and true  nicety are worth going away to war over. As  invigilate grew from antagonist to protagonist, he followed a certain process that consisted of  sign remorse, moving to a  jerky realization of nakedness, and  in the end valuing his  spiritedness which became a  need for his dignity.  admonisher regains his dignity by being truthful and  firm to all attempts made by the law to defeat him, which   tied(p)tually leads him to an honorable death.\nWhen John Proctor enters in the first scene, he is described as being powerful of body, even-tempered, and not  easy led but the  cockeyed manner he dis   plays does not spring from an untroubled  someone (Act 1, pg 20). Proctor appears confident and strong, and though he is respected and even feared in Salem, he has  deduce to regard himself as a kind of  baloney (Act 1, pg 20-21). In this introduction, the author states that Proctor is like the other  upstanding citizens, yet he is not. He is living with the hypocrisy of his  sustain actions. Proctor has little  obstacle calling out those who  exhaust acted unfairly as he does when Thomas Putnam accuses him of taking  ram from land that he  genetic from his  grandpa. I bought that track from  finesse Nurses  save five months ago he states to Rebecca, then he tells Putnam your grandfather had a habit of  willing land that never belonged to him, if I may say it  bold (Act 1, pg. 32). However, he has yet to come to terms with his own unjustly actions.\nJohn Proctors biggest mistake in life could arguably be his  ratiocination to commit adultery with Abigail Williams. Proctor, ...   
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