How has proctor changed since the beginning of the play?
He's no longer acting selfishly, he knows there is no witchcraft and that they are just faking it, he knows he must ruin his reputation to save his wife and integrity.
Hi Daniele, Here is what I have found for you: John Proctor's character changes from the beginning of The Crucible to the end in that he is initially reluctant to accept blame for his unfaithfulness to Elizabeth and his affair with Abigail but is, in the end, willing to do anything to save Elizabeth, including ...
Major events throughout the play made John Proctor change his emotions, believes and judgements. John started off being weak and unfaithful. Then due to Elizabeth being cold he changed and became violent and ill tempered. Towards the end of the play his morality changed, and he became courageous and a real hero.
John Proctor has changed because he did not believe in witchcraft, and did not want to get involved due to the affair. Now he is willing to get involved because he wants to protect his family name. And his is willing to prove to Elizabeth that he is worthy.
Proctor goes from doubt and uncertainty to a place of truth. He is redeemed and in the end finds his goodness. Hale, on the other hand, starts out completely certain and confident in the righteousness of his calling. By the end of the play, though, he is counseling people to lie just to save their lives.
At the end of the play, Proctor refuses to slander himself by allowing the court to nail his false confession to the church door. This action further exemplifies Proctor's integrity. Proctor knows that he will damn himself, yet again, if he agrees to confess.
The revelation that John has talked to Abigail alone changes Elizabeth. Her fear and anger about John's affair come out. She is colder to him, because as much as she loves him, his weakness towards Abigail is a major flaw in his character, which Elizabeth sees clearly even though John does not.
Reverend Hale is the character that changes the most in Arthur Miller's play The Crucible because his feelings on witchcraft turns from full belief to unbelievable doubt, his thoughts on Proctor changes from thinking that he is evil to thinking that he is a good and honest man, and he switches from doing God's work to ...
John Proctor's death symbolizes power to save a man's own name. He sacrifices himself to keep in name good and squander his name just to live in the town of Salem.
What conflict does John Proctor face at the end of the act? John Proctor is torn because he needs to speak out against Abigail and he knows that if he does, she will reveal that they had an affair to everyone.
How does John Proctor act in the beginning of the play?
At the beginning of the book, John Proctor is globally presented as a stubborn man who doesn't care about his society and her values. He doesn't show respect to Elizabeth by having an affair with his servant Abigail.
Proctor speaks his mind and stands up to Reverend Parris. He is scornful about the witchcraft hysteria but is cautious in his opposition to the trials at first. He persuades Mary Warren to tell the truth in court.
Honest, upright, and blunt-spoken, Proctor is a good man, but one with a secret, fatal flaw. His lust for Abigail Williams led to their affair (which occurs before the play begins), and created Abigail's jealousy of his wife, Elizabeth, which sets the entire witch hysteria in motion.
His great dilemma at the outset is adultery, a flaw he is trying to expiate; this segues into accusations of witchcraft. Finally, he faces a crisis of conscience, where his greatest dilemma lies in his sense of identity.
What happens to John Proctor? He confesses that he isn't a witch and is hanged. He felt this is the only way he would come to peace within himself.
John and his 3rd wife were tried on August 5, 1692. He was hanged on August 19, 1692 in Salem Village, Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Salem Witch Trials after being falsely accused and convicted of witchcraft.
This character is John Proctor, and because of his sins in the past he is able to learn from them and redeem himself. John Proctor's actions at the end of the play are believable because of this previously-mentioned redemption, and his actions further prove how …show more content…
He was hanged because he was accused of doing the devil's work.
In Act 2, we see a trait of John Proctor which is not being loyal to his own wife, Elizabeth Proctor. He doesn't like the food that Elizabeth made and we see that their relationship stays faded through a conversation that demonstrates that Elizabeth doesn't trust John anymore.
What conflict does John Proctor face at the end of the act? John Proctor is torn because he needs to speak out against Abigail and he knows that if he does, she will reveal that they had an affair to everyone.
What happens to Proctor in Act 1?
In Act One, the audience first sees him entering the Parris household to check on the health of the reverend's ill daughter. He is good natured with fellow villagers such as Giles Corey, Rebecca Nurse, and others. Even with adversaries, he is slow to anger. But when provoked, he does get angry.