Character Analysis Of Abigail Williams In The Crucible

1536 Words4 Pages

Abigail Williams, a character in Arthur Miller’s 1953 play “The Crucible”, is a complex character that I believe can be portrayed as the main villain and victim of the play. Immature, violent, and mentally unstable are a few negative qualities that describe Abby as the baddy. But yet at the same time as the play unravels us as readers can see her as a victim of the Salem society that fails to help her recover from her parents ' violent death. One of the big things in The Crucible that Arthur Miller fails to provide is the fact that the other girls crying “witch” are just as guilty as Abby, yet she is the only one to have all of the blame pushed onto her. There are examples and quotes in the play that suggest that Abigail Williams is recognised …show more content…

She demonstrates little hesitation in manipulating the truth and the people around her in order to get her way. However, in one of the first exchanges with the other girls, she displays a significant aspect to her characterization. Abigail is staying with her uncle, Reverend Parris, because of her parents ' death. It is clear that this was a very violent episode in her life. When she has to wrangle the will of the other girls and stop them from confessing, Abigail threatens them with physical harm: "And you know I can do it; I saw Indians smash my dear parents’ heads on the pillow next to mine, and I have seen some reddish work done at night, and I can make you wish you had never seen the sun go down!" Abigail experiences the psychological effects of violence. The experience of her parents ' death has lingered within her. To a certain extent, people in Salem are to blame for not understanding the effect this would have had on a child. Abigail is a victim of this violence and is a victim to a social order that fails to account for her psychological development. This does not excuse what she does. However, it does show that people such as Abigail are not "born" the way they are, but rather made through specific …show more content…

Though at the beginning of the play, Abigail is portrayed as a slightly vulnerable, misguided girl, this notion is quickly dispelled as she embarks on her murderous spree of dishonestly and false allegations. While some aspects of Abigail’s character are a result of her parents’ brutal murder, an oppressive society and Parris’s behaviour, this does not excuse the person she later evolves into and her deceitful behaviour and actions lead to the overall conclusion that Abigail is unmistakably villainous. However, Miller’s main message throughout the play is that while the malicious Abigail was directly at fault concerning the deaths and hysteria that swept the community, it is the community itself who is also largely to blame. The distrustful and corrupt society used the trials for personal gain (for example: Thomas Putnam who used them to gain land) and revenge, and it was this community that -though the selfish Abigail was certainly culpable for the devastating events that engulfed Salem- is ultimately to be

Open Document