Character Analysis Of Reverend Hale In The Crucible By Arthur Miller

536 Words2 Pages

The Crucible by Arthur Miller is a dynamic play that has diverse characters and many different themes. John Hale is a reverend that was sent to the town in order to diagnose witchcraft and help cure the girls. He is eager to discover witchcraft and allows other people to manipulate him but his views change over time. Throughout the play, Reverend Hale exemplifies overconfidence and this decreases because innocent people are being hanged and he becomes doubtful about the court for these reasons. A way that he changes throughout the play is by having his confidence decrease. He is very confident about diagnosing witchcraft and he is confident is his abilities. His large reputation causes his faith to rise since he believes in his abilities. The Crucible states “This is a beloved errand for He starts to doubt whether the court system is actually doing justice. The court system was killing the innocents and it was unfair because it stated that people were guilty until proven innocent. Hale realizes that there is no way to prove that someone is innocent which upsets him. Therefore he tries to get people to confess in order to save their lives. This is a change is character because he changes his morals. John Ditsky from the Gale database says“Hale's denunciation at the end of Act Three and the already-discussed ending of the play complete a consistent pattern of strongly structured dramatic episodes in the Ibsenian mode” (Overview). He is denounces what he believed to be good and he denounces his belief in God. The Crucible also states, “I denounce these proceedings, I quit this court”(Miller 111). Hale realizes how he can no longer control what happens and the trials are no longer in his hands so he tells them how he feels. Hale has a decrease of faith in the court system by seeing innocent people be put to death and having the court trials get out of

Open Document