Hypocrisy – The Crucible Post 2

Reverend John Hale is a character from the play The Crucible by Arthur Miller. He’s a hypocrite.

Oh, sorry, I think I’m going to fast. He is the reverend from Beverly, called to Salem to investigate for witchcraft. He is an expert in this field, and puts much emphasis on the justice of the jury and his decisions.

An unbalanced scale. Photo by OpenClipart-Vectors via Flickr cc

“Proctor, the court is just.” (Miller 73)
“Let you rest upon the justice of the court.” (Miller 67)
“My duty is to add to the godly wisdom of the court.” (Miller 64)

He repeatedly states that the court will be fair, and that he will add to that by finding out if there is really any connection to the supernatural. At first he pointedly says that there must be proof, and that “the Devil is precise.”

However, when Elizabeth Proctor’s name is mentioned in court, he visits her and her husband. He asks them—Proctor, specifically—many questions, of how Christian their household is, why they don’t go to church ofte, and if they could recite the Ten Commandments. It seems like Reverend Hale had already begun suspecting John Proctor even though there was no real proof of this. Yeah, so just.

Moreover, when a poppet with a needle in its belly is found in the Proctor home, Elizabeth was arrested, even though Mary Warren admitted it was hers. Hale again insisted that the court was just, despite the fact that Mary wasn’t even questioned any further when she clearly had something to do with the poppet. Hale chose to trust the word of Abigail Williams over the actual evidence, while actually doubting the court’s justice himself, making him a hypocrite.

This relates to the Shadowhunters books by Cassandra Clare. The third series, The Dark Artifices, quite possibly shows the most corruption and hypocrisy of the Clave, the government for Shadowhunters.

Just as Hale was being pressured to find witches, the Clave was being pressured by the public to hold someone accountable for the Dark War. And despite multiple witnesses of their loyalty and their courage against demons, Mark Blackthorn was abandoned to Faerie and forbidden to be rescued, and his sister Helen was exiled to an island in the middle of nowhere.

John Proctor was already known to be a non-believer of witches, and Mark and Helen were known to be half-faerie (many faeries had sided with the evil demons in the Dark War). Hale was still saying the court was being just in arresting Elizabeth. And the Clave yet claimed to be following the Accords and Laws, when they were clearly just making excuses for their prejudice.

Blatant Lies – The Crucible Post 1

Say someone points to you and accuses you of commiting cold-blooded homicide. Everyone in the immediate vicinity would turn and stare at you. Then you protest, but the person goes on ruthlessly, “You murdered the man. I saw you. I saw you with my own eyes! It was you.” People are turning away and giving you scared glances, and some are glaring at you menacingly.
Only, the accusation wasn’t true in the slightest.

This was what happened in The Crucible, by Arthur Miller. In the play, Abigail Williams, a strong-willed girl, accuses multiple women of witchcraft. A lot of the people she named were people who couldn’t protect themselves as well. This included a drunkard beggar named Sarah Osborn, and a pregnant homeless woman with no husband, Sarah Good.

These were blatant lies that Abigail made to save herself, and yet everyone believed them, because she had apparently opened her soul.

Abigail reminds me of a character from the book Divergent by Veronica Roth: Peter. In this book series, citizens are split into five factions, or are factionless, essentially homeless. Peter is Candor, which prizes itself in being honest and just. However, this character is the exact opposite of that; he lies and cheats and backstabs to get his way. There are many incidents where he gets into brawls with other teens, then claims that it was the other who started the fight. And since he is in Candor, and the other person is always from a different faction, people unanimously believed Peter.

All this demonstrates how society has a sort of natural bias when it comes to believing certain people over others. This could be due to fear, or actual belief that one sort of person is more reliable. Either way, lies have destructive results, and, in the case of The Crucible, can get you hanged.

Mi Ciudad Kaohsiung

Kaohsiung es la ciudad capital de Taiwán, entonces es más popular. Tiene una población de casi tres millones. La vida en Kaohsiung es ocupada y ruidosa, especialmente en los mercados de la noche. La mayoría de las casas son apartamentos altos y grises o marrones, como la mía. El aire no es muy limpio, pero las calles tiene menas basuras. Siempre hay medios de transporte en la calle, porque muchas personas usan motocicletas, coches, o autobuses.

La ciudad también es un poco aburrido, pero hay muchos centros comerciales para ir, y la “Torre #85.” Puedes ir a la piscina, comprar en el centro comercial, o relajarte en el parque. Pero, yo prefiero la ciudad Vancouver, en Cánada.