John's Passivity In The Crucible

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What makes John’s passivity and indifference ironic is the fact that John was involved with the witch trials the moment he decided to have sexual relations with Abigail. This single act caused a domino effect that led to the false imprisonment and unjust execution of innocent, god fearing people. John may think he is detached from this nonsense, but he is a main component in it all. John’s passivity indisputably sentences the citizens of Salem to death. Many may argue that John becomes an active character after Act Two, but his new supposed disposition is questionable. After Elizabeth is arrested, John resolves to go to court and even confess to lechery if it comes to it, however his new active attitude is false. Mary Warren is the one he pushes to give testimony that what the girls have been doing was all false. Another way in which …show more content…

The damage of his passivity is done. So many have already hung and Rebecca Nurse, the most godly woman in the community, is sentenced to hang that morning. Even if John had decided to proclaim himself a witch or not at this point, the fate of all the innocent that suffered would have been the same. Also, John does not simply hang to make a statement and die with valor, he dies to clear his conscious. John’s guilt is an apparent theme in the play and in the final act, his guilt turns into self-loathing. When Elizabeth is trying to convince him of his goodness, John says, “I cannot mount the gibbet like a saint. It is fraud. I am not that man.” (Miller 125). John is aware he is no hero. In this quote, he recognizes his faults, especially those of hypocrisy and scandalous adultery. John proclaims before his death that there is a shred of goodness and that this shred of goodness compels him to be a martyr for his cause. However, what he sees as benevolence within him is in actuality his guilt. There is not courageous about what he does, it is only a pitiful man punishing

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