“You drink blood, Abby! You didn't tell him that!”(1034) exclaimed Betty to Abigail in the play The Crucible by Arthur Miller. In Salem, Massachusetts 1692 a group of young girls were accused of committing witchcraft. Throughout the play many people were hanged because the girls accused people that they don't like which caused them to be hanged or sent to jail. Since Abigail Williams is motivated by her love for John Proctor she will do anything she can to get rid of John Proctor’s wife, Elizabeth Proctor and take her place as John's wife.
First off, Abigail Williams is motivated by her love for John Proctor. She will go as far as killing Elizabeth Proctor or accusing her for witchcraft to take her place as John's wife. “She is blackening my name in the village! She is telling lies about me! She is a cold and sniveling women…”(1037) Abigail Tries to convince John that Elizabeth is a bad woman, that John should leave her for Abigail. Abigail tells John how horrible and mean Elizabeth is to try to make John love her. In conclusion, Abigail will do anything to get John Proctor to love her as much as she loves him.
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Because of Abigail’s obsession over John Proctor she almost goes crazy trying to win John’s love. “I saw your face when she put me out, and you loved me then and you love me now!” (1037). Abigail is so obsessed with John Proctor that she thinks he returns her love. John explains how he is over Abigail and that he loves his wife, Elizabeth. Abigail won't give up, she keeps pushing John to love her back even when John says he will never go back. To conclude, Abigail is obsessed with John and no matter what John says about how he loves his wife, Abigail will stop at nothing to get John Proctor and will never stop loving
In Act 1, John Proctor leads Abigail on while he has a wife. Instead of leading Abigail on he had an opportunity to end the hysteria. At that point, he created drama since Abigail had gone so far to do witchcraft and drink blood in order to have Elizabeth killed in Act 1. In Act IV, Proctor confessed his sin which made the town go insane. Proctor's decisions caused Abigail and Elizabeth to hate each other for the reason they both were in love with the same man.
Abigail comes to John asking him to continue where they had left off with their affair but John refused. She offered to him to come to Barbados with her but he turned her down then, also. He told her in the movie, The Crucible, that he would not dare do unto his wife again what he once did to her. John Proctor said to Abigail, “Abby, I may think of you softly from time to time, but I will cut off my hand before I reach for you again.” This quote from the movie shows that John Proctor was once a sinful man, but now however, displays him as honest and loyal to Elizabeth
Abigail Williams: Abigail only cares about herself. She is selfish and cold; she manipulates her friends and the people close to her. All of her actions are for her own well-being. Abigail manipulates people even though others lives are in danger. All of the hangings that occurred in Salem were her fault.
Abigail has had an obsession with John ever since John clutched her back and when he starts sweating like a stallion when ever he is near her. Abigail is falling head over heels for John and does not want Elizabeth in the picture. Abigail is always threatening the girls that she was dancing with in the woods with. She threatens the girls so they would not tell
Elizabeth Proctor is good wife with all kindness, moral and upright assembling in her personality. The only weakness of her is cold and indifferent emotion, and it is kind of the indirect cause of John Proctor’s affair with their housekeeper, Abigail Williams. Then she’s got a good reason to be kind of distant and suspicious. “You were alone with her? Why, then, it is not as you told me.
Abigail seeked out venges against John Proctor therefore targeting his wife. In her head she decided that if she couldn’t be with John then no one else could. Abigail saw that the people were afraid, vulnerable and took advantage of the situation to try and save herself. She was afraid that the public will find about her affair with John Proctor, and about the witchcraft that happened that night in the forest.
In the beginning of The Crucible, by Arthur Miller, speculations of witchcraft spread around the town of Salem like wildfire, after Reverend Parris’ daughter is put into an unexplainable coma-like state. The town is thrown into an uproar and the trials begin after Tituba, who confesses to communing with the devil, and Abigail Williams accuse numerous townsfolk of consorting with the devil. “Long-held hatreds of neighbors could now be openly expressed, and vengeance taken, despite the Bible’s charitable injunctions. Land-lust which had been expressed before by constant bickering over boundaries and deeds, could now be elevated to the arena of morality; one cold cry which against one’s neighbor and perfectly justified in the bargain.
Seven months before the play began, Abigail Williams worked for the Proctor household until John Proctor and Abigail Williams began to engage in an affair. John’s wife, Elizabeth Proctor, soon found out and fired Abigail on the spot, but the situation did not end without any consequences. Abigail had developed angry feelings against Elizabeth and fell hopelessly in love with John Proctor. Abigail holds a hope in her heart that John loves her and John will leave Elizabeth for her, despite John Proctors’ constant rejections to Abigail. So when an opportunity to get rid of Elizabeth comes up in the form of power to accuse people of witchcraft, Abigail jumps at the chance.
Abigail Williams: The First True Witch of Salem, Massachusetts “Controlled hysteria is what’s required. To exist constantly in a state of controlled hysteria. It’s agony. But everyone has agony. The difference is that I try to take my agony home and teach it to sing” (Arthur Miller, AZ Quotes).
It wasn’t simply any love though, it was her need for a married man, John Proctor. This desire drove her mad as she clung to any chance to have him as her own. “Proctor: … [Abigail] thinks to dance with me on my wife’s grave! …” (pg 10).
Abigail seeks vengeance after her affair with John Proctor. She is still madly obsessed with him. After John rejected her, she makes up lies in court in desperate attempt to get Goody Proctor hanged. She thinks if she gets rid of Goody Proctor she will be able to have John all to herself. One quote that supports this is “I do sir.
Abigail is willing to accuse any one in her path of witchcraft even if it means taking the lives of those close to her. Abigail Williams’ emotional desire guides her actions even if it conflicts with morality. Abigail williams is driven to do unthinkable things because of her love for John Proctor. Abigail works in the Proctor’s home and while doing so she finds herself attracted to John. Abigail’s obsession with Proctor leads them to have an affair, which they try to keep
A lot of what John Proctor does in The Crucible is to save his wife Elizabeth. When John Proctor says, "I will bring you home. I will bring you soon."(Miller 77) he promises to save his wife from being hanged for witchcraft. This also shows John’s love for his wife, Elizabeth, and his choosing of this love over his lust for Abigail.
Power Through A Young Girl “It's always times like these when I think of you and I wonder if you ever think of me”(Vanessa Carlton). Abigail Williams, from The Crucible by Arthur Miller, has trouble letting go of John Proctor with whom she had an affair.(ADJ) Even though Proctor is over Abigail, she will stop at nothing to get him back. Abigail Williams uses fear, manipulation, and lies to get what she wants. Abigail Williams uses fear as one of her tactics to get what she wants.
Abigail 's heartless attitude is shown in act two when she frames and accuses Elizabeth Proctor for witchcraft. She desired and longed for this revenge on poor Proctors innocent wife, aiming for her through out the play. Later on in Act Three she seems to lose her last attachment of society by destroying John Proctor, who she claims to love with all her heart. When John attempts and threatens to expose Abigail’s wrong doings, she skillfully manages to turn the whole problem around on him, sending him off