The crucible how does andover differ from salem
She has taken all of his money and left, possibly by boat. What is the condition of Salem at this point? It is chaos. How does Andover differ from Salem? They already have overthrown the court and stopped the hangings. How do the proposed hangings of Rebecca Nurse and John Proctor differ from the past executions?
The people of Salem were happy at the first executions, but Nurse and Proctor were good people needed in the town. What does Reverend Parris want Danforth to do? To postpone the trials. What does Reverend Hale want Danforth to do? To pardon the condemned, or at least give them a week.
He feels guilty for not realizing the truth of the situation sooner. Danforth reads the names of the condemned out loud and asks if he ever saw any of them with the devil. Proctor again replies in the negative. Danforth pressures him to name other guilty parties, but Proctor declares that he will speak only about his own sins. Proctor hesitates to sign the confession, saying that it is enough that the men have witnessed him admitting his alleged crimes. Under pressure, he signs his name but snatches the sheet from Danforth.
Proctor refuses to allow him to nail the paper with his name on the church door and, after arguing with the magistrates, tears the confession in two and renounces it. Danforth calls for the marshal. Herrick leads the seven condemned prisoners, including Proctor, to the gallows. Hale and Parris plead with Elizabeth to remonstrate with Proctor, but she refuses to sway him from doing what he believes is just. Not long afterward, Parris is voted out of office. He leaves Salem, never to be heard from again.
Rumors have it that Abigail became a prostitute in Boston. In , the excommunications of the condemned are retracted. The farms of the executed go fallow and remain vacant for years. Months have passed, and things are falling apart in Massachusetts, making Danforth and Hathorne increasingly insecure. They do not want to, and ultimately cannot, admit that they made a mistake in signing the death warrants of the nineteen convicted, so they hope for confessions from the remaining prisoners to insulate them from accusations of mistaken verdicts.
Danforth prioritizes a bizarre, abstract notion of equality over the tangible reality of potential innocence. Clearly, the most important issue for the officials of the court is the preservation of their reputations and the integrity of the court. As a theocratic institution, the court represents divine, as well as secular, justice. To admit to twelve mistaken hangings would be to question divine justice and the very foundations of the state and of human life.
The integrity of the court would be shattered, and the reputations of court officials would fall with it. Danforth and Hathorne would rather preserve the appearance of justice than threaten the religious and political order of Salem.
More important, however, Proctor fixates on his name and on how it will be destroyed if he signs the confession. What do Hale and Danforth request of Elizabeth Proctor? They both want Elizabeth to get John to confess.
What happened to Giles Corey? John feels like he is damned no matter what. He already sinned by having an affair with Abigail, so who cares if he sins again by lying? At least he will get to have a little more life on earth.
Elizabeth says he is a good man because he has yet to confess even though he has been tortured. How has Elizabeth changed since we first met her? Elizabeth says that John is a good man and she knows it. She also thinks she has some responsibility for their predicament.
Elizabeth says it takes a cold wife to prompt lechery. After John confesses, what does Danforth want him to do? Danforth wants a signed confession from Proctor. You will not use me!
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