Lying has always been one of the big issues that man struggles with. Yet almost anyone who has ever spoken a word has lied or bent the truth a little bit. In most cases people tend to lie to avoid getting caught and dealing with the consequences.
Arthur Miller has written a play called, “The Crucible” back in 1953. Most of the characters are lying to themselves and/or others. Mary Warren is now trying to make things right but Abigail and the girls don’t want to confess to the lies they have made.
Mary Warren and the girls have been misleading the town of Salem with
Abigail’s lies. Mary tries confessing her “sin” but the judges don’t believe her and now she is being accused of witchcraft. Mary has come to her senses to portray the truth, “I
Mary Warren, like many of the other characters in Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, shows great internal conflict with fear through their actions that play a large role in the Salem Witch Trials. Mary Warren is a very shy, naive and lonely seventeen-year-old girl. Although she has a clear sense of honesty and guilt, she winds up playing a significant role in the trials. Mary Warren does not show up in the play as much as the other characters, but Arthur Miller uses her to portray a bigger and more important idea. Through Mary Warren, Arthur Miller shows how people are greatly manipulated by fear which holds a substantial amount of control over them and their actions, affecting the events of mass hysteria.
The Crucible is a famous play written by Arthur Miller, an American playwright who has
Abigail is not only a liar she is selfish. She tells lies that hurt others in order to help herself and she is devious. In the court room she announces, "I want to open myself! . . . I want the light of God, I want the sweet love of Jesus! I danced for the Devil, I saw him, I wrote in his book, I go back to Jesus, I kiss His hand. I saw Sarah
If Abigail was not worried about the hysteria that will start because of the accusations she will later receive she would not have told herself and others to lie about it, showing that people will lie in face in hysteria.
The Salem Witch Trials: a time where the innocent were guilty and the guilty got away with murder. This horrendous event can be further explained through Arthur Miller’s play, The Crucible. Miller has won many awards in his time for writing many dramas that are very popular amongst the people and The Crucible just so happens to be one of them. It tells a story about a harsh time that many people faced when they were losing loved ones who were found guilty since they didn’t confess to a crime that they never committed. While reading the play, a person will find a theme of power. One specific character, Mary Warren, helps show this theme because as soon as she gains power, her character changes drastically. Throughout The Crucible, Mary Warren is portrayed as a very dynamic character since she begins as being very wimpy, then she gains confidence and becomes brave, and then she goes right back to being timid and controlled by Abigail.
Lastly, Abigail Williams threatened all of the girls to admit only that they were dancing in the forest, but nothing else. They knew that she had drank blood as a charm to kill John Proctors wife. The only reason for this was that she wanted John Proctor for herself, and she didn't want her uncle to find out about it. Also, she didn't want her name to be blackened in the village, seeing that she was the niece of Reverend Parris. If they found out she had drank blood, she would be convicted of witchcraft and then hanged. All of the girls began accusing women as a group after Beth woke up towards the end of Act One. They did this to keep themselves from being accused by each other, and also to draw attention to themselves. Abigail said she had seen things done by the Indians that were unspeakable. If any of them were to talk about what actually happened in the forest, she would do some of those things to them.
In the heart wrenching play known as “The Crucible” I would say I identify the most with Mary Warren. While reading this play I noticed that Mary was shy and was easily convinced, I can effortlessly say I would be the same if I was in her situation. Three ways I would say we are similar are that she hung out with the wrong crowd but she never participated in their actions with witchcraft. She was scared of Abigail and didn't want to be hanged. And in the end she told the truth.
The girls suddenly changed their story after realizing that nobody was going to accept what occurred. Abigail was practically the ringleader of this. She began praying louder, claiming that she wanted the love and light of God and Jesus, but then the adolescent initiated to name off random people whom she had claimed to have seen with Lucifer. The rest of the children began to follow in her footsteps and abruptly the building became full of names of random people who they were practically accusing as witches. That event should have been a dead giveaway to parade how they were lying considering the story had a sudden change and it should have been obvious that they were directly attempting to put the fault on other people to get the heat off of their backs to selfishly get themselves out of the predicament.
So Abigail gets scared and accuses Tituba the black slave of making her and the girls go to conjure the devil. Tituba denies it but all the girls jump in on it so they bring Tituba outside to whip her. Tituba says “She beg me conjure” Abigail gets scared her lie is going to be exposed. They whip her until she finally says she dealt with the devil. They ask her who else dealt with the devil and she says Sarah Good and Sarah Osborne, they are taken to trial. The first 3 people have been accused of witchery and now it keeps on rolling through Abigail Williams
Instead of owning up to their mistake, the girls claim that Tituba placed them under a spell. Later on the girls claim seeing others with the Devil. Abigail’s past affair with
Before Mary starts working for them, a beautiful girl by the name of Abigail is their servant. The cause of exit for Abigail is because of a sin: lechery. She has an affair with John Proctor while Elizabeth is sick and can not fulfill his needs. Abigail falls in love with John, but he loves Elizabeth and when she finds out about what they did, she fires Abigail. This causes rage in Abigail, “She is a cold, sniveling woman” (1271), Abigail says about Elizabeth to John.
Lies are not a rare occurrence, and are all around us. When faced with an unsettling truth, humans opt out confronting that truth by lying. No one is exempt from this imperfect quality of human nature. The statement made by Martin Buber is valid because of how prevalent lying is in day to day life. The liar believes that lying can create a bubble around the truth, but all bubbles are easily popped. Once they are popped, the liar is left in a worse position than they started in, but many lies go un-popped, as they blend with all other surroundings.
Abigail is now worried that one of the girls will tell someone what really happened, and this would most likely destroy her reputation in Salem. So she tells the girls, “Let either of you breathe a word, or the edge of a word, about the other things, and I will come to you in the black of some terrible night and I will bring a pointy reckoning that will shudder you”(20). The girls are now terrified that Abigail will truly come after them if they say anything, the result of this is that they keep their mouths shut about it. It is a common stereotype that a woman will do anything in her power to get her way. This is most definitely evident in this particular novel through Abigail Williams.
Eighteen-year-old Mary Warren, who is a subservient to the proctors’ has a fatal choice to make. In the play The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, it talks about the Salem witch trials begin, sparking from a young girl's imagination. Many young girls blame and frame others thy hate. Abigail the Minister Paris's niece avoids a whipping by blaming others and accusing them of witchcraft. As the play heats up more and more people are sent to trial and jail. You may wonder what sparked Abigail's interest in blaming others. Possibly you’ll wonder what the meaning of the Salem trials is. In the play The Crucible, Mary Warren is agreeably looked at as Abigail's poppet because she sides with Abigail and was told to give Elizabeth the poppet.
Lies are very common within this day and time. In the necklace Mme. Forestier lied about the necklaces worth and tricked them into thinking it cost more than the actual price. My mother who is a Mayor has been accused of lies that she