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“The Crucible”

Act III & IV Review


Act III
Questions # 1 - 4
As the act opens, who is being interrogated, and on what charge? Martha Corey is
being interrogated and is accused of reading fortunes.
 
What is Mary Warren now prepared to tell the court? Mary is prepared to tell the
court that the girls’ accusations are fake (“pretense”).
 
What compromise, or deal, does Danforth offer to Proctor? What is Proctor's
response? Elizabeth told the court that she is pregnant. Danforth is willing to
spare Elizabeth for a year for her pregnancy which should satisfy John if his
purpose is to save Elizabeth. However, John is unwilling to accept the deal
because he does not want to abandon his friends. He wants to help everyone, not
just himself.
 
What does Giles Corey allege in his deposition about Thomas Putnam’s motives?
Giles claims that Thomas Putnam is accusing people so that he can buy their land
once they are executed.
Questions #5 - 8
At what point does John Hale begin to show that he is less than satisfied with the
court's procedures? After signing seventy-two death warrants, especially Rebecca
Nurse’s, Hale has started to question what is going on in Salem. He recognizes
that the people are fearing the court more than they fear God.
 
 How does Abigail threaten Danforth? She reminds Danforth that he is not
excluded from the Devil’s company and that he could be accused too.
 
What confession does Proctor make in open court? How does Danforth test the
truth of this confession?  John confesses to his affair with Abigail. Danforth
questions Elizabeth in court about John’s indiscretions while John and Abigail
have their backs turned.
 
What happens to John Proctor at the end of the act? Mary Warren accuses John
Proctor of witchcraft and corrupting her. He is arrested.
Questions #9 - 10
How does John Hale show his disapproval?
Hale denounces the proceedings and quits the court.
 
This act contains much irony. Explain how the following are ironic:
 
a. John Proctor's confession – Proctor’s confession should have been the thing that saved
Elizabeth but instead she lies to protect her husband which in turn condemns him.
 
b. Proctor's passionate outburst at the end of the act with the court's interpretation of his
remarks – Proctor means that God has left Salem; evil has overtaken the town.
However, the court interprets his comments as blasphemy and evidence that he is
compacting with the Devil.

c. Miller's comment in the stage directions that Abigail, "out of her infinite charity,
reaches out and draws the sobbing Mary to her…" – Abigail created hysteria in the
courtroom to distract from Mary Warren’s and John’s claims about her reputation, but
makes herself look like a good person who comforts Mary even though she is evil.
Act IV
Questions # 1 - 4
What is the setting of this act? How much time has elapsed since the end of
ActThree?  The act is set in the Salem jail in the Fall. Months have passed since
the end of Act III. The play began in the Spring of 1692.
 
Immediately after his entrance Governor Danforth remarks on a "prodigious stench."
What is the cause of the odor? Danforth believes he smells liquor on Herrick’s
breath but the stench is caused by the number of people packed in the jail.
 
What does Samuel Parris report about Abigail Williams and Mercy Lewis and why is
he afraid for his safety? What is Danforth's reaction? Abigail and Mercy Lewis
have run away after robbing Parris. Parris is afraid that he will be a target if the
citizens of Salem rebel. Danforth calls Parris “brainless.”
 
Why is Danforth especially nervous about rumors concerning events in Andover?
What are his reasons for receiving no pleas for pardon or for postponement of the
executions? The people of Andover overthrew the court during their witchcraft
trials. Danforth will not pardon or postpone because if she starts now it will look
like what the court has done up until this point is questionable or even wrong. He
does not want the people to doubt the actions of the court or the law.
Act IV
Questions # 5 - 7
According to John Hale, what is the present condition of the countryside?
Hale has seen orphan children wandering from house to house, abandoned
cattle on the roads, rotting crops and fear in the few adults left in Salem.
 
According to Elizabeth, how did Giles Corey die? Giles Corey refused to
plead in court, so he was pressed to death with stones.

For what does Elizabeth ask John to forgive her? Elizabeth asks John to
forgive her for not showing him love and affection when he needed it. She
takes some responsibility for John’s affair with Abigail.
 
Why does Proctor refuse to sign his confession? John wants to preserve
his name and his legacy: “Because it is my name! Because I cannot have
another in my life!...I have given you my soul; leave me my name!”
Act IV
Questions # 9 - 10
 Why do you think Danforth is said to be alarmed at the news that Abigail and
Mercy Lewis have fled? What inner conflict may this news rouse in him?
How does this conflict affect the course of his decisions in this act? Danforth
is shocked that the girls have run away because he realizes that it looks like
they don’t believe in or stand by what they started in Salem. Throughout the
course of the act, he is even more stubborn and insistent on carrying out the
executions because he believes that someone has to stand up for what is going
on in Salem and see it through.
 
 
 What structural parallel in Act Two is recalled by John's tearing up of his
confession near the end of this act? How does this parallel relate to a theme of
the play? In Act II, John Proctor ripped Elizabeth’s arrest warrant, much like
how he ripped up his confession at the end of Act IV. This relates to the theme
of standing up for what you believe in and rebelling against authority.

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