The trumped-up witch hysteria in Salem, Massachusetts, deteriorated the rational, and
emotional
stability of its citizens. This exploited the populations weakest qualities, and
insecurities. The obvious
breakdown in Salem's social order led to the tragedy which saw twenty innocent people
hung on the
accusation of witchcraft. Arthur Miller, author of The Crucible, used hysteria to
introduce personality
flaws in vulnerable characters. A rigid social system, fear, and confusion were evident
conditions that
became prevalent before and during the witchtrials. These conditions only contributed to
the tragedy in
Salem.
The isolation of the Puritan society created a rigid social system that did not allow
for any
variation in lifestyle. The strict society that was employed at this time had a
detrimental effect on the
Proctor family. John Proctor, a hard working farmer who had a bad season the year before
and struggling
this year was occasionally absent at Sunday service. This was due to the fact he needed
to tend to his
crops. Also, Proctor did not agree with the appointment of Mr. Parris as the newest
minister, and therefore
did not have his last child baptized. With the latest craze of witchery and swirling
accusations, John
Proctor was easily indicted of being a messenger for the devil by the testimony of his
disillusioned servant
Mary Warren, who in the past committed perjury. The court who heard the testimony easily
accepts it
because she is a church going person, while John Proctor slightly deviates from the norm.
This transfer of
blame is also noticeable when the truth is first discovered about what the girls were
doing in the woods.
The girls were not blamed. The blame was put on Tituba, the "black" slave who was said to
have
"charmed" the girls. Abigail swears that "she [Tituba] made me do it".(pg.40) It is
obvious that in the
Puritan society that whatever did not conform to what the masses had decided as proper,
then the
deviated, but innocent, were to blame. This practice contributed to the tragedy in
Salem.
The fear of what was unknown created an uneasiness within Salem's population that added
to
Salem's social demise. The circumstances surrounding the witchtrials gave residents
something to blame
the supernatural on. The condemning of Tituba was mainly due to this. When Tituba took
the girls into
the woods, and they performed their ceremony, something the Puritans were not accustom
to, she
convicted of witchery. Along with Tituba, Martha Corey was indicted solely because she
would not allow
Giles to read them. Giles also stated that "I tried and tried and could not say my
prayers. And then she
close her book and walks out of the house, and suddenly--mark this--I could pray
again!"(pg.38) This
evidence of witchery is preposterous. The only thing that is true is that Giles was not
allowed to read the
books, and because he did not what the books contained, he feared them. This type of
reaction throughout
the community to the supernatural, and what was not known indicted many people, and
contributed to the
tragedy in Salem.
The state of mass confusion in Salem created a society of individuals who were only
concerned
with what was good for them, so that they would not be the next one implicated in the
witchery scandal.
This situation is clearly evident after Hale becomes privy to the true story of what
happened in the woods.
Abigail abandons Tituba, and accuses her of "sending her spirit on me in church; she
makes me laugh at
prayer"(pg.41), and Abigail also says Tituba "comes to me every night to go and drink
blood"[devil's
blood](pg.41). Abigail reacts like this only to save her from being suspected of
witchery. At the end of
Scene One, many community members are accused of consorting with the devil. These names
were given
by all of the girls present that took part in the ritual in the woods, in an attempt to
return to the graces of
God and to be declared bewitched. This was a common reaction that many had when accused
of witchery.
It led to confrontations which pitted neighbor versus neighbor and husband versus wife.
The delirium
which created this situation aided in the misfortune proceedings in Salem.
The evident destruction of Salem's social order was due to rigid stipulations on
deviation, fear of
the unknown, and mass confusion. These conditions left Salem susceptible to an apparent
epidemic such
as witchcraft. The susceptibility that Salem fell victim to, was the cause of a great
tragedy which saw
twenty townspeople hung at the hands of the state. The Crucible written by Arthur Miller
is a story of a
great catastrophe which highlights a "free man's courageous and never-ending fight
against mass
pressures to make him bow down in conformity"(intro.-x) and shows how hysteria can be
used for evil
purposes in an atmosphere were there is a belief in freedom and right of dissent.
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