Want this question answered?
Reverend Hale's advice to John Proctor is that he should simply admit to being a witch to save himself because "life is God's most precious gift."
Reverend John Hale is Related to Reverend Sameul Parris. :)
Thou shall not commit adultery
Hale does not accuse Elizabeth of Witchcraft. He visits the Proctor household to ascertain how religious they are. He finds three faults; Proctor non attendance at church, youngest son not baptised, and a short fall in John Proctor's knowledge of the Commandments.
No Reverend Parris is not jealous of John Proctor in the Crucible. John Proctor and Reverend Parris do not like each other.
Reverend John Hale and John Proctor are characters in the play "The Crucible." Hale comes to Proctors home to question why Abigail Williams was released from working for the Proctor's.
Reverend Hale's advice to John Proctor is that he should simply admit to being a witch to save himself because "life is God's most precious gift."
Listening to John Proctor and Mary Warren, Reverend Hale becomes convinced that they, not Abigail, are telling the truth.
First he has him recite his commandments and he forgets adultery; then Reverend Hale wants John to confess because he believes that dying is a worse sin than lying.
Reverend John Hale is Related to Reverend Sameul Parris. :)
Thou shall not commit adultery
Hale does not accuse Elizabeth of Witchcraft. He visits the Proctor household to ascertain how religious they are. He finds three faults; Proctor non attendance at church, youngest son not baptised, and a short fall in John Proctor's knowledge of the Commandments.
No Reverend Parris is not jealous of John Proctor in the Crucible. John Proctor and Reverend Parris do not like each other.
Listening to John Proctor and Mary Warren, Reverend Hale becomes convinced that they, not Abigail, are telling the truth.
thatAbigail Williams just lie to all that theirs not witches that they just dance in the forest
John Proctor, Elizabeth Proctor, Rebecca Nurse, and Giles Corey are the main nonconformists in The Crucible. Reverend John Hale, Ezekiel Cheever, Reverend Samuel Parris, Betty Parris, Mary Warren, Thomas Putnam, and Ann Putnam are the conformists.
In "The Crucible," Reverend Hale accuses John Proctor of not regularly attending church services and failing to have his third child baptized. These actions are seen as evidence of Proctor's lack of commitment to Christian religious practices.