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Arthur Miller’s The Crucible

Arthur Miller’s The Crucible. Act Two SMIC, AP LANG & COMP with Mrs. Ma. Relationships:. Discuss John and Elizabeth’s relationship. Why does Proctor make a point of saying, “I mean to please you, Elizabeth.” (line 31)?

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Arthur Miller’s The Crucible

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  1. Arthur Miller’s The Crucible Act Two SMIC, AP LANG & COMP with Mrs. Ma

  2. Relationships: • Discuss John and Elizabeth’s relationship. • Why does Proctor make a point of saying, “I mean to please you, Elizabeth.” (line 31)? • What do the stage directions in that same line suggest about Proctor’s efforts?

  3. Comprehension check: • Why has court been set up in Salem? (lines 82-85) • Who is the leader of the girls who claim to be bewitched? (lines 95-98) • What system is used to determine whether the accused people are witches? (lines 98-100) • Do Proctor and Elizabeth believe the accused are witches? How can you tell? (lines 101-104) • How many women have been arrested? (line 215) • What is the punishment if a person is found guilty of witch craft? How can a person avoid that punishment? (lines 221-226)

  4. Analyze Language: • Mary Warren’s lines sometimes uses the present tense when describing past events, a sin these examples: • “she come into the court” (line 247) • “I say to myself” (lines 247-248) • “I never see no sign” (line 328) • What should be the standard verb forms in these lines? • Are there other instances where Miller uses present tense to relate a past event?

  5. Analyze Conflict: • Reread lines 323-344. • How has Mary’s defense of Elizabeth in court changed the power dynamics among Mary, Elizabeth, and Proctor? • Hint: How did Proctor speak to Mary in Act One? • How does that change reflect the upheaval throughout the community?

  6. Comprehension Check: • Discuss the scene in which Hale begins to interrogate Proctor (beginning in line 478). • Although Hale come to visit “without the court’s authority” (450-451), his conversation with Proctor certainly feels like a court proceeding, doesn’t it? • What news from Proctor shocks Hale? Why is Hale suspicious? (594-598, 602-604) • How does Proctor explain his silence? (610-11) • How does Proctor explain Hale’s effectiveness? (612-18) • What does Hale suspect, though he fights the suspicion? (617-620)

  7. Comprehension Check: • With what crime is Rebecca Nurse charged? (691-692) • Why is it so surprising that Rebecca Nurse and Martha Corey have been accused? (686-689) • How does Elizabeth characterize the town after leaning of these arrests? Why does she direct her comment to Reverend Hale? (681)

  8. Analyze Mood: • Reread lines 752-758. • Discuss how Proctor’s demand for proof in the arrest of his wife goes completely ignored by Cheever, who instead looks for evidence against her (what is that evidence?). • How does Proctor’s ineffective cry for proof reflect and further the mood of The Crucible? • Why does Proctor say that the children have all the power in Salem now? What evidence might he offer to prove his claim? (880-882)

  9. Dramatic Irony: • Review Definition. • Why is Proctor struck by Hale’s declaration that “some secret blasphemy” (946-947) has caused all of the confusion? • Although Abigail does not appear in this act, her presence is undeniable. • Identify and explain the moment in Act Two in which you feel Abigail’s presence most strongly.

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