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hang this sort he is most commonly referring to the accused of witchcraft and danger to him well hes a preacher so..you can make the connection there!! i havent read act 4 yet but that's what i think :) good luck
Rebecca Nurse says this line to Parris before Reverend John Hale arrives.
John Proctor
Hale to Parris.
Danforth gives her time to live after she's accused of murder because she says she's pregnant
hang this sort he is most commonly referring to the accused of witchcraft and danger to him well hes a preacher so..you can make the connection there!! i havent read act 4 yet but that's what i think :) good luck
Rebecca Nurse says this line to Parris before Reverend John Hale arrives.
Then, she is obviously in half-danger.
John Proctor
John Proctor
One example of personification in The Crucible is in Act 1 when Reverend Parris says that his "ministry's at stake." This gives human qualities to the abstract concept of his ministry being in danger. Another example is in Act 3 when John Proctor is told to "confess" and he replies, "Is there any ship to take me?" This implies that confession is a tangible object that can physically transport him.
Hale to Parris.
John Proctor says this ironic statement about witchcraft trials to his wife, Elizabeth, in Arthur Miller's play The Crucible. Witchcraft was known as "black mischief" as in black magic, but he felt it was the witchhunting trials that were a stain on their community.
those were stage directions .
Danger, Says: "Larve"
Danforth is a judge in the novel The Crucible, which depicts the Salem witch trials. He says that the difference between witchcraft and ordinary crime is that a person accused of witchcraft cannot defend themselves by calling witnesses.
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