Judge Hawthorne and Marry Warren are fictional characters from the story, The Crucible. The judge asked Mary to faint and she couldn't.
they asked her to faint again in the court but she cannot do it. It was hard for her to do it because I think she never faints.
He askes mary to faint to show them that everything was a act.
She is asked to faint as she had before.
She is asked to faint as she had before.
Judge Hawthorne and Marry Warren are fictional characters from the story, The Crucible. The judge asked Mary to faint and she couldn't.
they asked her to faint again in the court but she cannot do it. It was hard for her to do it because I think she never faints.
they asked her to faint again in the court but she cannot do it. It was hard for her to do it because I think she never faints.
He askes mary to faint to show them that everything was a act.
She is asked to faint as she had before.
She is asked to faint as she had before.
Mary Warren disobeys her employers and goes to Salem because she has become an official of the court. The character of Mary Warren is from The Crucible.
To demonstrate it.
IT IS SUPPSE TO REPRESENT THAT MARY WARREN HAD SENT IT TO CLAW THE GIRLS WHILE THEY WERE IN THE COURT ROOM.
In Arthur Miller's play "The Crucible," Mary Warren explains that she cannot faint on command because she is not able to control her body in such a way. She describes how the other girls who faint do so because they are caught up in the hysteria of the moment, implying that her inability to mimic their behavior stems from her lack of that intense emotional state. Mary feels that true fainting comes from genuine fear or overwhelming emotion, which she cannot summon at will.
Proctor doesn't want Mary to go back to court because it will further involve him. He doesn't believe the girls who are making the accusations, but the court is being unfair and unjust to those accused.
because he is paying her 9 pound a year to do chores!and to look after his wife!