In a sense, The Crucible has a classic tragic structure, John Proctor is a tragic hero in the play. To be honest, I am upright and frankly, Proctor is a kind person, but there is a secret, fatal flaw. His desire for Abigail Williams caused their anecdotes (before the start of the play), and caused Abiegail's embarrassment against his wife Elizabeth, which moved all the witches hysterically. When the trial began, the Proctor noticed that Abigail could stop running in Salem, but only when he admitted his adultery. Such a perception will damage his good name, and most importantly, the Proctor is a very proud person, and he makes his reputation very important. He ultimately attempted to call Abigail as cheating without revealing important information through Mary Warren's testimony. When this attempt failed, he called Abigail as a "prostitute", publicly declared him guilty, and finally broke up in a drastic manner. Then he understood that it was too late, that things went too far, and even the truth could not break a powerful fanaticism that allowed Abigail to whip. He paralyzed the courtroom and litigation, but he also noticed his terrible role in developing this passion unlimitedly.
The director redeemed in his last scene, eventually accusing the witch trial. Provided an opportunity to publicly admit his sin and life, he almost surrendered and even signed a written confession. His extreme pride and fear of public opinion forced him to refuse to exclude his adultery from the court, but at the end of the script he was more than his personal reputation than his reputation I was more interested in. He still wants to save his name, but for personal and religious reasons, not for public reasons. The refusal of false confessions by parents is a true religious and personal position. Such a confession will humiliate his fellow prisoners who bravely died as testimony to the truth. Perhaps more relevant is that misunderstandings may insult him. It not only contaminates the reputation of his world, it also pollutes his soul. By refusing to give up his personal honesty, Proctor has declared his idea that such honesty implicitly allows him to enter heaven. He went to the gallows redeemed for the previous crime. As Elizabeth told Hale's request to end the drama, she convinced Proctor as openly admitted: "He now has his kindness, God is from him Bless you to take it! "
Director John: "What is God in heaven, what is John, what is John?" John is a man with a strong moral belief and care only about his family's safety and personal welfare. He is not worried about the beliefs of any other people in the town, his boss, the pastor's idea. After trying to avoid participating in the witch trial, he was later appealed by magic and sentenced to hang. John tried to avoid taking part in the Salem Witch trial. - ... It is clear that it is "infectious". When one of the girls saw someone hurting them, others thought about it. When one of them began calling the name of a witch, others began to get excited about naming it. Salem Witch The conclusion that reached the end of the trial is that there is no evidence so it is concealment. Abigail's friends seemed to pay the same attention as Abigail's friends, so they fell into hysteria.
Arthur Miller's Crucible is a fictitious experimental version that shapes John Proctor as one of the protagonists in the play. Proctor is drawn in thirties, and Abigail Williams is 17 years old, but real John Procter and Abigail Williams are about 61 and 11 in the Witch trial. In the play, because they have a relationship, Abigail blames the Elizabeth sprocket with magic. In fact, Elizabeth Proctor was first named by Aptum on March 6, 1692, claiming that Proctor's ghost attacked the girl. She was accused by Abigail on March 14 and was further criticized by Mercy Lewis. Miller asked Mary Warren to condemn her as torturing her to Proctor, which was after the first accusation of Abigail in early April 1692. There is no historical evidence that Abigail knew his magic before he accused John Prox. In the 1996 drama movie, Proctor played Daniel Day Lewis