Mar 14 2020 PROCTOR: I mean to please you
Try your hand at explaining why each one is ironic and analyzing the difference between what the character mean when she said the quote and the hidden meaning.
1. ACT TWO. Vocabulary Word. Definition. 1 – Merriam-Webster. 2 – Define the word in your own.
Mar 14 2020 Do you know who I am
Sep 17 2018 ... analysis and quotes. Character. Base of. Power. Quotation ... Text – The Crucible
Mar 13 2020 DANFORTH: He bids her confess? Page 2. 2. PARRIS: Hear me. Rebecca ... PROCTOR: I mean to deny nothing! DANFORTH: Then explain to me
to your topic sentence and thesis? (Your explanation should be at least as long or longer that the quotation itself. Page 2. Introducing Quotations1 ...
Nov 1 2011 Quote: Analysis: Page 2. Elizabeth Proctor. John Proctor. Abigail Williams. Mary Warren. Abigail Williams. In this row
The Crucible - Reader's Theater Script. Act II - Last Scene - Elizabeth Proctor is accused and arrested. Characters - Rev. Hale Proctor
PART THREE - Act 2. Pass out the SATDO/Interpretation Chart for Act 2. Point out that students will need to choose three characters to track from Act 2
Who is on trial in "The Crucible" Act 2?
John Proctor sits down to dinner with his wife, Elizabeth. Mary Warren, their servant, has gone to the witch trials, defying Elizabeth’s order that she remain in the house. Fourteen people are now in jail.
What happens in The Crucible Act 2?
The Crucible: Novel Summary: Act 2 Act 2 Act II opens in the house of John and Elizabeth Proctor, eight days later. They begin having dinner and it gradually comes out that Mary Warren has gone into Salem. John Proctor had forbidden her to do so and reprimands his wife for allowing Mary to override her.
What are the themes in The Crucible Act Two?
Two major themes emerge in the second act of The Crucible. The first of these is the line between public and private. The act itself moves from the intimate conversation between husband and wife to more public matters, but the division between these two spheres becomes obscure.
How do the public and private spheres become obscured in The Crucible Act Two?
Two major themes emerge in the second act of The Crucible. The first of these is the line between public and private. The act itself moves from the intimate conversation between husband and wife to more public matters, but the division between these two spheres becomes obscure.