Many actions make tragic hero features dignified, but only a few people stand out. In Arthur Miller's tragedy "crucible", the main character of the tragedy died not only in children's games and dishonesty but also in a courteous case. John Proctor struggles for justice, frankly, justice, honesty, finds forgiveness in his fatal flaw. He showed these characteristics through the story, but John is a dynamic person.
Throughout the story, John was accused of hurting Abigail by honoring his wife Elizabeth to express the qualities of a sincere man. John defended Elizabeth as "Herick! Herrick does not detain her" (p. 177: Director). Show more
John Proctor showed how he changed his way of looking at other people like Abigail, using his honest thought to tell the truth to the courtroom.
John Proctor expressed his faithful and indifferent character through the story, but when the time came to the end of the tragedy, he exposed another feature until the last breath. With such honor, it can be said that John Procter died without it. Or he was out of breath for him and Elizabeth's life. However, John Proctor expresses himself as an upright man. He proved a lot of things in this case and got a second chance before being hanged. Such things will not give honor, but it will bring shame and embarrassment. He chose to die with his name with honor and pride. Because he knew that he was right and knew that he could not win because "I said - I said - God is dead". This sentence means that John changed in the story and made a conclusion. He painted something Abigail was not lying about, but he knew he could not resist the failed war. For him, it is best to die a man he knows and a man with his own name. Even at the time of shock, John was dead, honest, honest and candid. So he was calm and self-changing before being hanged.
John Proctor is a good man, a diligent person, cherishes those who are respected in his family and in the village of Salem. Regret According to the Proctor of the statement, after he was that Abigail did, he tried to become a better person, and he is, "No, no, Avi" when he said, that he broke his did. Vows of marriage this is "(the first act, 408 line) is done in. John Proctor is a good man of the region, he is always working in his farm, he is a man of glory. His marriage I swear, he is also concerned with his wife and his wife.
"Everyone has sinned and has not reached the glory of God" Nobody is kind. Therefore, John Procter is not a good man but a sinner. Because no one is a good person, does that mean that all men are not good? No, John Procter is a sinner, he committed adulterous adultery. But John Procter lived his life and tried to image his savior, Jesus Christ. Despite his sinful nature, the guardian acknowledges his sin and eventually dies for God. Even if he is a sinner, John Procter is as kind as a man. Undoubtedly, he committed a terrible sin. He and his wife's assistant, Abigail Williams, handed the crime to his barn when his wife was sick. The insight raised in the Puritan society has become devastating in the heart of Proctor, and he can recite the Ten Commandments in one minute. From this point of view, John is fully aware that adultery is wrong.
Is John Proctor a nice person? John Proctor, he said to be a very powerful and attractive person, when he entered the Paris of the house to join the girl, he met the characters and the first at the end of the first act. When he first appeared, Proctor was considered a witty, distinct person with strong independence. These qualities seem to make him a good person to cast doubts on the motives of mourners who weep and cry. But his attack on Abigail caused his position as a problem since he committed a false crime he despised by others. At the same time, Abigail obviously did not finish their extramarital problems. She accused Proctor of putting "knowledge" in his mind. In a sense, Abigail blamed him for destroying her innocence by purity. In another sense, she also blamed him for showing to her the extent to which hypocrisy dominates Salem 's social relationship. ... Read more