Ezekiel Cheever and Herrick, the town marshal, arrive with a warrant for Elizabeth's arrest.
rebecca~
Rebecca
Ezekiel Cheever and Herrick, the town marshal, arrive with a warrant for Elizabeth's arrest.
Ezekiel Cheever and Marshal Herrick arrive at the Proctor home because of Elizabeth. They have come with a warrant to have her arrested.
Ezekiel Cheever and Herrick, the town marshal, arrive with a warrant for Elizabeth's arrest.
rebecca~
Rebecca
Ezekiel Cheever and Herrick, the town marshal, arrive with a warrant for Elizabeth's arrest.
Ezekiel Cheever and Marshal Herrick arrive at the Proctor home because of Elizabeth. They have come with a warrant to have her arrested.
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.
Rebecca Nurse
Ezekiel Cheever arrests John Proctor's wife, Elizabeth, in Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible." He finds a poppet in their home with a needle stuck in it, which is used as evidence to accuse Elizabeth of witchcraft. Cheever is a clerk of the court, and his actions reflect the hysteria and paranoia surrounding the Salem witch trials.
yes you find it ironic because ezekiel raped elizabeth and made her pregnant
Yes, because John Proctor and Elizabeth thought about going to him to tell him about the truth that what the girls are doing is a fraud, and Elizabeth says Cheever knows him well. There is irony there because they trust him and thought good of him.
In Arthur Miller's "The Crucible," Ezekiel Cheever accuses Elizabeth Proctor of using a poppet (doll) as a voodoo tool to harm Abigail Williams. Cheever points out that the needle found in the doll's stomach is evidence of Elizabeth’s supposed witchcraft, suggesting that she intended to use it to inflict pain on Abigail. This accusation reflects the broader themes of paranoia and hysteria that permeate the Salem witch trials.
In Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible," Elizabeth Proctor wants John to tell Ezekiel Cheever that she is innocent and that he should speak out against the false accusations of witchcraft. She hopes that John will defend her honor and reveal the truth about the hysteria surrounding the trials. Ultimately, Elizabeth desires for John to take a stand against the injustice occurring in Salem.