As one can see, in performs I and II of Arthur Millers The Crucible, all characters have a dark side, gorge with virtuous weaknesses. These personal faults are manifested in the characters actions and in the intricacies of his inside(a) conflict.
        John Proctor is a man with many moral weaknesses, the first of which are revealed to the reader in Act I. His roughly glaring moral fault is his having committed an act of fornication with young Abigail Williams. As soon as he sees her, his casing betrays a faint smile. This is evidence that Abigail still has an affect on his behaviour. He also freely admits that he thinks softly of her from metre to time. Obviously he still has not put her give away of his mind. He knows what he has done is wrong, yet he cannot, or will not, purge himself of the lustful desires that led him to sin in the first place. This idea is reinforced by his looking up at Abigails window, burning in his loneliness, as Abigail describes it. In many respects John Proctor is also deceiving himself into idea he is beyond moral reproach. He insists that he and Abigail neer touched, yet they surely did, in both the physical and ablaze sense.![]()
He also reveals something of his strained relations with his wife when Abigail calls her a cold and sniveling woman he does not book her but merely says, Do you look for wippin? In short, Act I reveals John Proctors lustful desires and his inability to erase them from his mind.
        In Act II we learn more of the effects Johns wrong has on his wife, Elizabeth and his sense of justice. As John enters the house he asks Elizabeth to bring in some flowers saying, Its winter in...
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