Who Is Abigail Williams Play In The Crucible

1219 Words3 Pages

Abigail Williams, a young woman living the year 1692, is a major piece in the Salem Witch Trials. Between accusations and coveting Elizabeth Proctor’s husband, Abigail is far from immaculate. Throughout this play you can comprehend the amount of drama that she puts into this story. Abigail Williams plays a major role in the downfall of other characters, as well as her own. Abigail was a teenage girl who lived with her uncle and worked for Goody Proctor as a housemaid. From the line, “I saw Indians smash my dear parents’ heads on the pillow next to mine, and I have seen some reddish work done at night,”(175) you can conclude that her parents were killed by Indians while she was younger. Reverends didn’t make that much money, so from this …show more content…

At one point Proctor says, “you’ll be clapped in the stocks before you’re twenty.”(176) During that time period, relationships between older men and young teenage girls were probably not unusual. That makes the affair between John Proctor and her more incomprehensible, but yet it was iniquity towards Elizabeth Proctor. The power that Abigail felt she had, due to her affair at such a young age, gave her effrontery. While John Proctor is trying to mend things between him and Elizabeth, you can feel the tension that Abigail causes while she tries to save her relationship with …show more content…

If anyone knew about the affair with Proctor, Parris would most likely meet his deposition and excommunication from the Church. “Abigail, I have fought here three long years to bend these stiff-necked people to me, and now, just now when some good respect is rising for me in the parish, you compromise my very character. I have given you a home, child, I have put clothes upon your back--now give me upright answer. Your name in the town--it is entirely white, is it not?”(171) This shows how important reputation was and how easily it could be taken away. The term “white” shows how racist that time period was. Abigail uses the phrase, “there be no blush about my name,”(171) to show that she is a Christian and should not be compared with someone who is not white. Tituba, a black slave, had strange beliefs, so Abigail used it to her own advantage which allowed her to claim that Tituba and others in the community made her do all these

Open Document