Friday, October 25, 2019
How Miller Uses Reverend Hale in The Crucible Essay -- Arthur Miller T
How Miller Uses Reverend Hale in The Crucible    Arthur Miller describes Reverend Hale as nearing forty, a  tight-skinned, eager-eyed intellectual. An intellectual is usually  thought of as someone with his head in the clouds, who spends so much  time thinking great thoughts that he's inept in the real world of  human emotions. There is some truth in this image of John Hale. He  knows a lot about witchcraft; but he knows almost nothing about the  people of Salem or the contention that is wracking the town. How  pompous and arrogant he must sound when he says, ââ¬Å"Have no fear now--we  shall find [the Devil] out if he has come among us, and I mean to  crush him utterly if he has shown his face!â⬠ And yet he has every  reason to be confident. To Hale, demonology is an exact science, for  he has spent his whole life in the study of it. ââ¬Å"We cannot look to  superstition in this. The Devil is precise.â⬠ But he is not just a  bookworm, he is a minister of God. His goal is light, goodness and its  preservation, and he is excited by being called upon to face what may  be a bloody fight with the Fiend himself. All his years of preparation  may now finally be put to the test. He fails, and the evil that  follows his first appearance totally overwhelms him. Is the fault in  his character? Is he not as smart as he thinks he is? Is he a fool,  whose meddling lit the fuse to the bomb that blew up the town? Much of  the play supports this answer. What looks like success at the end of  Act I soon carries Hale out of his depth, and every time he appears  after that he is less sure of himself. At the end of the play he has  been completely crushed: he, a minister of the light, has come to do  the Devil's work. ââ¬Å"I come to counsel Christians they should be...              ...ocence. In October 1692  someone accused his wife of witchcraft and where Hale had been rather  forward in the prosecution of the supposed witches he now came to  believe that spectral evidence was not enough to convict on. He then  began to argue against the trials.    The effects of Haleââ¬â¢s character and action helped progressed the play  and spark off the witch trials. By his arrogance in the beginning of  Act 1 where ââ¬Å"he feels the pride of the specialists whose unique  knowledge has at last been publicly called for. This also goes to show  that Hale has one of the tragic heroââ¬â¢s flaws, which is arrogance. Hale  does try to redeem himself by changing his view about witchcraft. Hale  tried to save John Proctorââ¬â¢s life giving him advice and reasoning him,  but to avail. Proctor was hung. Hale became the audienceââ¬â¢s voice in  the end saying the witch trials were wrong.                       How Miller Uses Reverend Hale in The Crucible Essay --  Arthur Miller T  How Miller Uses Reverend Hale in The Crucible    Arthur Miller describes Reverend Hale as nearing forty, a  tight-skinned, eager-eyed intellectual. An intellectual is usually  thought of as someone with his head in the clouds, who spends so much  time thinking great thoughts that he's inept in the real world of  human emotions. There is some truth in this image of John Hale. He  knows a lot about witchcraft; but he knows almost nothing about the  people of Salem or the contention that is wracking the town. How  pompous and arrogant he must sound when he says, ââ¬Å"Have no fear now--we  shall find [the Devil] out if he has come among us, and I mean to  crush him utterly if he has shown his face!â⬠ And yet he has every  reason to be confident. To Hale, demonology is an exact science, for  he has spent his whole life in the study of it. ââ¬Å"We cannot look to  superstition in this. The Devil is precise.â⬠ But he is not just a  bookworm, he is a minister of God. His goal is light, goodness and its  preservation, and he is excited by being called upon to face what may  be a bloody fight with the Fiend himself. All his years of preparation  may now finally be put to the test. He fails, and the evil that  follows his first appearance totally overwhelms him. Is the fault in  his character? Is he not as smart as he thinks he is? Is he a fool,  whose meddling lit the fuse to the bomb that blew up the town? Much of  the play supports this answer. What looks like success at the end of  Act I soon carries Hale out of his depth, and every time he appears  after that he is less sure of himself. At the end of the play he has  been completely crushed: he, a minister of the light, has come to do  the Devil's work. ââ¬Å"I come to counsel Christians they should be...              ...ocence. In October 1692  someone accused his wife of witchcraft and where Hale had been rather  forward in the prosecution of the supposed witches he now came to  believe that spectral evidence was not enough to convict on. He then  began to argue against the trials.    The effects of Haleââ¬â¢s character and action helped progressed the play  and spark off the witch trials. By his arrogance in the beginning of  Act 1 where ââ¬Å"he feels the pride of the specialists whose unique  knowledge has at last been publicly called for. This also goes to show  that Hale has one of the tragic heroââ¬â¢s flaws, which is arrogance. Hale  does try to redeem himself by changing his view about witchcraft. Hale  tried to save John Proctorââ¬â¢s life giving him advice and reasoning him,  but to avail. Proctor was hung. Hale became the audienceââ¬â¢s voice in  the end saying the witch trials were wrong.                         
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