The Crucible John Proctor Reputation

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“It takes many good deeds to build a good reputation, and it only takes one bad one to lose it” (Benjamin Franklin). Whether for fear of losing reputation or out of motivation to gain it, mankind has always had the natural desire of the respect of their people.This ardor for reputation has, over time, provoked humanity to aspire towards noble qualities. In The Crucible, Arthur Miller demonstrates these effects of reputation, particularly in the case of John Proctor. John Proctor’s willingness and desire to sustain his moral character, consequently inclining him towards the balance that he possesses prior to his quietus, despite his “tragic flaw”, lead to his choices throughout The Crucible and justify his stubbornness at Miller’s denouement. …show more content…

As time elapses, several more honorable natures of Proctor are revealed, including his boldness and his lack of fear of physical tribulation; however, one of the most forefront features that poses as a risk and a threat to Proctor’s relationships is his incapacity to forgive himself. John Proctor has had a frenzied history with breaking the law of chastity--having an affair with another woman named Abigail--and his wife, Elizabeth, could sense at least some sort of disunion in their relationship, declaring “John, you are not open with me. You saw [Abigail] with a crowd…” The embarrassment and guilt that John felt because of those few moments of lustful actions followed with John til the day he died, and he could not find himself able to pardon his own mistakes. His inability to forgive himself ultimately results in his own heroic death, and the cavity in John and Elizabeth's marriage that comes from this deficiency of self-compassion dramatically influence his actions throughout The Crucible. Throughout each act, John Proctor made major decisions that affected nearly everyone in the town of Salem and brought a voice of sanity and logic to the broken and corrupted

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