The Crucible
The 'confessions' in the play are not usually about truth, as they are enforced and arise out of fear. Discuss the role you think confessions play in the dramatic force of this play.
The Crucible
The Crucible
Confession is everywhere in this play. People confess because they will be executed if they do not. Confession however has its limits. Proctor is a man searching for some moral self-respect. His affair with Abigail has been beating at his conscience since the play began. Finally at the end, stripped of his integrity, Proctor is given a chance to save himself and his wife from execution. All he has to do is confess that he hangs out with the Devil. This seems like an easy thing to do. Rev. Hale points out that all Proctor needs to do is sign his name to give the witch-court validation which will keep them in business. Proctor, however, decides that his name is all he has. John is a man of integrity or rather a man that desperately seeks integrity. A verbal confession under extreme duress is one thing but the physical writing of his name represents who he is as a man. Proctor can not sign the confession. To sign it would be the tangible and final loss of his integrity. He aptly sums this up when he cries out, "All I have is my name!"