In Act IV Proctor says, "I cannot mount the gibbet like a saint. It is a fraud. I am not that man." At the end of the play he goes to execution saying, "Now I do think I see some shred of goodness in John Proctor." What has made this change come about?

In Act IV Proctor says, "I cannot mount the gibbet like a saint. It is a fraud. I am not that man." At the end of the play he goes to execution saying, "Now I do think I see some shred of goodness in John Proctor." What has made this change come about? In "The Crucible" John Proctor plays the tragic hero. Honest, up right and blunt spoken, he is a good man. At the beginning of the play, he was a proud man who places great emphasis on his reputation. But by the end of the play, although the fear of having a black name is still inside him, he is more concerned with his personal integrity than his public reputation. In Act IV, he says, "I cannot mount the gibbet like a saint. It is a fraud. I am not that man." When he says these words he does not want to die a martyr and he wants to have his life. However when he does to execution, he says, "Now I do think I see some shred of goodness in John Proctor." There are many things that caused him to change at the end of the play. The conversation he has with his wife Elizabeth before he dies is a very important part of what made him change. Because of his affair with Abigail, their marriage was not as immutable as before and Elizabeth had not yet forgiven him for that. This made John guilty and troubled with himself for a long time. So when Elizabeth finally forgives him, John loses hold of his guilt and puts it behind him.

  • Word count: 1221
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Why does John reject the 'civilization' represented in "Brave New World" and how does Huxley make this apparent in his writing?

Why does John reject the 'civilization' represented in "Brave New World" and how does Huxley make this apparent in his writing? John comes from an Indian reservation in New Mexico, and goes to the Brave New world with Bernard Marx who was about to be sent away from there because he was different. Bernard and Lenina brought John because they knew that John was the son of the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning with Linda. This would humiliate the Directory because having viviparous babies in the Brave New World was seen as disgusting, and no one would ever imagine that the director could have had one himself. John was not accepted in the savage reservation because his mother slept with many men, this was seen as an absurd, but in the Brave New World it was not, "Every one belongs to everyone else"; having sex with many different people was a moral duty. John was fascinated by the prospect of going to the Brave New World because his mother told him that in the Brave New World people never had problems, because even if they had they would take a drug called Soma, which would make them "take a holiday from reality" and forget all about them. He was also told about how people travelled by helicopter and he thought that they could really fly. He learned how to read and right superficially, how everything is clean and that no one marries, that there are no nasty smells, that

  • Word count: 772
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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I am going to discuss the portrayal of men and masculinity in two Scottish plays I have studied. The plays are 'Men Should Weep' by Ena Lamont Stewart' and 'Perfect Days' by Liz Lochead.

I am going to discuss the portrayal of men and masculinity in two Scottish plays I have studied. The plays are 'Men Should Weep' by Ena Lamont Stewart' and 'Perfect Days' by Liz Lochead. Both plays portray men under a negative light. In 'Men Should Weep' men are the dominant sex and are seen socially of far greater importance. Whereas in 'Perfect days' men are easily manipulated and tend to be controlled by the contents of their trousers. 'Men Should Weep' is a play which examines how the family unit crumbles under the pressure of poverty. 'John' the father of the family is the main male figure throughout the play. His wife Maggie does everything for him and their family. However although there is always a lot to be done John manages not to do anything to help as he would never want to damage his alter ego. Not only doesn't he help around the house but he is also unemployed. This says a lot about John's character and implies that he is a selfish self-centred character. 'I'd an idea a was heid o this hoose' Although John gives the family no support in anyway he is still quite content in thinking that he is head of the household. Due to the way society was at this time it implied that women had to do as their husbands told them. Once women married they were their husband's property. Men in that day and age overruled women they were more powerful and a lot of women feared

  • Word count: 1228
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Consider the relationship between the two characters, John and the female speaker in the passage from Charlotte Perkins Gilman's short story 'The Yellow Wallpaper.' Why do you suppose the speaker feels that she 'must' write what she thinks and feels?

Consider the relationship between the two characters, John and the female speaker in the passage from Charlotte Perkins Gilman's short story 'The Yellow Wallpaper.' Why do you suppose the speaker feels that she 'must' write what she thinks and feels? What does writing mean to her? Why would John think her writing 'absurd'? Is this merely an account of a woman going crazy or is Gilman offering us 'social protest' here? What evidence do we have that the speaker is unstable? What aspects of life in late 19th Century America might the author be protesting against? The very fact that the speaker feels the need to write down and not articulate her feelings of unease arouses the reader's suspicion that the relationship between her husband and herself is not as sound as it should be. Even on first reading there appears to be a distinct lack of understanding between the couple, for the speaker states, "I know John would think it absurd," implying that he would not be able to see the situation from her perspective. The speaker's declaration that she 'must' write further enforces the idea that she is not understand, for her need reveals the true extent of her entrapment and desperation, exposed through her strong choice of language. Although he does not directly speak, through the speaker's portrayal of him, the reader can assume that he had undertaken a very patronising attitude in

  • Word count: 1452
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Review Of The Film “Witness”

Review Of The Film "Witness" A young Amish boy called Samuel is witness to a brutal murder in a toilet at a train station. After a line up where Samuel does not identify the killer, he identifies a picture of an ex policeman, Mc Fee in a display cabinet at the police station. A policeman called John Book links him to the taking of barrels of the drug speed that had gone missing from police possession. John has to live with the Amish to escape Mc Fee. While he is living there he becomes increasingly fond of Rachel the mother of Samuel, but other Amish do not approve of the things he does while he is staying there. The way he handles problems by resulting to violence and the dancing with Rachel to the music from his broken down car. The Amish farm is then raided where John is staying, the raid carried out by Schaeffer and his men was to find Samuel as he is the only witness to the murder. Shortly after the raid John and the Amish decides he should return home and leave Rachel behind because they agreed that he and Rachel could never become a couple because they are very different people wanting to lead two incompatible lives. "Witness" is set in two main places, the busy, modern and violent city of Philadelphia and the calm, traditional and old fashioned countryside of Pennsylvanian. They are geographically close together, but in other ways they are worlds apart. In the Amish

  • Word count: 2888
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Examine the Character of Don John.

Examine the Character of Don John. The play Much Ado About Nothing was written and performed in the Elizabethan period. It was set in Italy in a place called Messina. As expected the play has an happy ending with a marriage, as it is an comedy, except throughout the play you think it may end as an tragedy with lots of talk of death and misery. The mood swings from light comedy to dark tragedy. The play appealed to the Elizabethans because it mirrored life of that time. The play includes love, status and relationships between men and women. Shakespeare play was popular because there wasn't many sources entertainment and he wrote it in a style that provided them with varied emotions. Shakespeare's plays wouldn't entertain us as much today because of the racist comments; prejudice against women, as they were treated as a possession and had no use beyond being a wife or mother. Today we have different views on what's entertainment. We are generally more equal today, where as men (particularly farthers) dominated Elizabethan society. This period was racist and to be an illegitimate child you were seen as evil and malicious. This is why Don John adds excitement; tension; drama and a dark side. As Don John is a bastard child and wants to cause suffering to those who look down on him he feels he has a right to claim the legitimate heirs, therefore he's a threat. As a

  • Word count: 1361
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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The lesson.

The Lesson The night of my first real kiss was also the night of the worst fight I have ever had with my mother. I was a 16-year-old girl and considered myself pretty mature for my age. I did well at school, was good looking and had always been good at sports. I wouldn't have called myself popular, but I had friends. Now that I think about it I was one of the luckier ones, unlucky however in love. I had had my eye on John Wilkinson forever, and my chance finally came when I spied him at the party that my best friend, Caroline, and I had finally gathered the courage to go to. The guy throwing the party lived in a red brick house in a privately owned close in San Francisco. His house was dark, and crowded, the light from the kitchen not quite reaching the corner of the garden where John stood. I was wearing my new vintage denim mini-skirt, my black jimmy choo kitten heels and a jimmy joolz t-shirt. My hair was straight and I new I looked good, but I was still petrified. Caroline gave me a wink of encouragement and pushed me out the kitchen into the garden. The next thing I new me and John, were talking, and soon we were the only ones left in the garden, in next to no time we were kissing and soon were walking hand in hand away from the party. I felt better than I had in my whole life. I felt as If I was seeing the whole world for the first time. I mean before John had just been

  • Word count: 1133
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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'The Crucible' is a play written by Arthur Miller in 1953.

'The Crucible' English Coursework Assignment 'The Crucible' is a play written by Arthur Miller in 1953. It is set in 1962 and based around a witch-hunt in Salem, Massachusetts. Many citizens are tried and hanged for suspected association with the devil and witchcraft. The majority of the accused are innocent. The main story is based very closely on historical facts and is very accurate. The play contains a very strong link to McCarthyism. The hunt for communists and the hunt for witches produces an almost parallel, showing great similarities between the two. Like Joseph McCarthy, the Salem judges prosecuted many people for suspicion of crimes with no significant background evidence. Once these people were accused, there was a weak change of them ever seeing justice and receiving an outcome of innocence. Very few people had the courage to stand up to such accusations, except John Proctor, who not only stood up for what he believed, but was prepared to sacrifice his life to save others. John Proctor is a feared and respected man. He is forceful and dignified throughout the village of Salem. As soon as he is introduced, he shows his forcefulness by disciplining Mary Warren for disobeying his orders. He threatens her with a beating and she "tries to retain a shred of dignity" portraying that Proctor can reduce a person to the verge of tears with a forceful threat, again

  • Word count: 1884
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Look at Abigail Williams relationship with John Proctor.

Kimberley Hardy The crucible by Arthur Miller Look at Abigail Williams relationship with John Proctor. What effect does this have on his relationship with Elizabeth? What dramatic effect does her actions have? The Crucible is a play that is based on a true story by Arthur Miller. It is set in 1692, in a small village called Salem. In this essay I am going to examine the affair between Abigail Williams and John Proctor, and what effect this as on his relationship with his wife Elizabeth. Abigail used to work for the Proctors until Elizabeth found out about the affair and sacked her. She is an orphan and is living with her uncle Parris. Her and the other girls from village go to the woods dancing and pretending to cast spells. They get found by Parris, this leads to Betty who is his daughter fainting and going into a state of shock. Mary Warren, the proctors servant also faints. When the villagers find out they assume its the work of the devil as they live in a very religious Puritan society. Abigail and the other girls start accusing people of witchcraft saying that they led them to the devil. In the era of the Salem witch trials accusations of witchcraft and devil worship were taken very seriously, any mention of this would result in hysteria. These accusations get out of hand and soon the hole village is destroyed by the lies. It as been seven months since the affair

  • Word count: 1987
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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"The Crucible" Critical evaluation.

"The Crucible" Critical evaluation By Gordon Walker In the play " the crucible" by Arthur Millar, the main character John proctor is faced by a number of important decisions that come to a dramatic climax upon which John has to decide wither to keep his name, integrity and honour or keep his life. John was found in this uncompromising situation during the puritan time of 1692, in a small village situated in the state of Massachusetts called Salem. During this time the settlers of Salem were devoted Christians and had a deep believe in the existence of witches, and in believing their alliance with Satan saw them as a work of pure evil, and as a direct enemy of god and subsequently themselves. During a time where accusations of witchcraft are frequent, and taken with increasing belief, a difficult situation arises for john's strong rebellious, and somewhat unusual character. Arthur Millar himself describes him as "a man in his prime.... with a quiet confidence and an unexpressed, hidden force"; John Proctor is a different character from the norm in his village, a fact even emphasized by the mere fact he lives five miles out for the village in a neighboring farm. This link in his physical difference from the town can be directly linked to his emotional difference with its citizens. Unlike his fellow Salem's john is a man of principles, who doesn't blindly follow authority,

  • Word count: 1407
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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