In the novel, The Sacrifice by Kathleen Benner Duble, Abigail and Dorothy Faulkner are victims of being accused falsely for witchcraft during the time of the Salem Witch Trials in 1692. Abigail and Dorothy Faulkner are both young girls around the age of ten. The girls grew up in a small town called Andover in Massachusetts, reasonably close to Salem, where the trials were held. The story begins with Abigail being punished for running in the fields with her skirt lifted up, and at the time, that was a sin for women. They both live their lives with their family on their farm doing chores daily, such as tending the animals, sewing, and other indoor chores. Their lives go on regularly with their daily complaints of chores until their grandfather, …show more content…
Abigail and Dorothy are immediately arrested by Constable Ballard and Justice Bradstreet, both officials of the town. The two girls are then sent to the Salem Town Prison. They live in the dark, damp, stench-filled prison for weeks with their Aunt Elizabeth who has also been accused to witchcraft. As the weeks past, Aunt Elizabeth dies of sickness caused by the unfit environment of the prison. This brings serious attention and worry to the girls’ mother, Mama. Mama visits the girls and tells them to accuse her of witchcraft so they would be proved innocent when their trials come and Mama replaces them in jail. Mama does this because she knows that she would not be hanged or put to death because she bears a baby and law states that the baby must be delivered before …show more content…
Duble’s family lineage connects to Abigail Faulkner back generations. As Duble did research on her family past, she wrote the story of Abigail and Dorothy to reveal what people did during the Witch trials and how people reacted to it. The main focus of the book was the motherly connection between the girls and Mama. Mama was willing to take her children’s place in the prison just so that she knows that they are safe from the harsh environment of the prison. Aunt Elizabeth, who died in the prison, was a symbol for all the other prisoners who were victims of being wrongly accused. Just as Aunt Elizabeth died, many others died just like her and it wasn’t uncommon. As the story ends, Abigail decides to sin again, by lifting up her skirt and racing across the field. This signifies her freedom from the witchcraft
In Puritan times, women and children held little to no power compared to men. However, Abigail Williams, a 17-year-old girl, obtains power through accusations of witchcraft. To keep her own secrets, Abigail accuses Tituba, a black slave, of witchcraft. Tituba frantically confesses to avoid being hanged, and she and Abigail list names of other women who they claim are witches. These accusations, which only grow throughout the play, give power to the accuser.
As a twelve year old girl Abigail Williams played one of the most dominant roles in the Salem Witch Trials along with her cousin, nine year old, Elizabeth “Betty” Parris. Together these two girls, along with more, would indirectly murder many based off the accusations made by those accused (these girls being the initial accusers). Abigail was born on July twelfth in the year sixteen eighty in the town of Salem located in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Her parents died when she was very young due to an indian raid targeted at the town she lived in. Due to this happening, she later moved in to live with her uncle (who happened to be the reverend of the town) and her younger cousin Elizabeth “Betty” Parris who prefers to go by Betty.
Salem Witch Trials Genocide is the deliberate killing of a large group of people. The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 were an example of a genocide. Women were accused of witchcraft with little to no evidence. These practices were not unlike those of McCarthyism. McCarthyism was a similar incident, in which many people were accused of being secret communists in the 1950’s.
Rachel Groome Period 1 The Crucible Many trials were held due to accusations of witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts in 1692. A few held more responsibility for the trials than others. In The Crucible, written by Arthur Miller, the Puritans of Salem were sometimes falsely accused or guilty of witchcraft. The characters that held most responsibility for the trials were Abigail Williams, Reverend Hale, and Reverend Parris.
She could have just taken the punishment, but she blamed everyone else in the town of being a witch. Saying their spirit made her and the other girls go out into the woods to dance and drink from the pot. On the other hand Abigail could be considered innocent because growing up she did not have any good role models. Her uncle, Reverend Parris, was more worried about the church and what the people of the town thought of him that he did not care for his family.
This could be to show that she was a witch and they should hang her because they all freaked out to show everyone that she was a witch while they were only
What Caused the Salem Witch Trials Hysteria of 1692? In Exodus 22:18, it proclaims, “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live!” In 1692 Salem, Massachusetts, the Puritans believed every word that the Bible said, causing the death of twenty people because they were accused of witchcraft. What caused the panic and alarm that lead to the death of twenty people in Salem?
Throughout History, women have long struggled and fought for the same equality, justice, and rights as males in society. Historians have two opposing views of what life was like in Puritan society. One side argues that Puritan society was a golden age for women as they worked alongside their husbands, had an important role in the household. However, opposing historians argue that Puritan women were inferior to men in the society for five main reasons. Women were inferior because they were supposed to be silent company, they only received half the inheritance of their brothers, they were meant to have and take care of the children, they received harsher punishment for their wrongs, and they had to follow strict rules.
REVIEW OF LITRATURE A.) SUMMARY SOURCE A Although the whole book had information on the Salem witch trials. The introduction, chapter 1 and 2 and the conclusion had information regarding the research needed • Introduction: states what the Salem witch trials where and who they accused.
Abigail Williams and the girls is responsible for the deaths of the people who were wrongly convicted and hanged. Also Danforth has some of the blame for this situation as well. However, the girls are the ones who started this situation because the book explains, “Mr. Parris said, “That my daughter and my niece I discovered dancing like heathen in the forest,” (6). In Salem, the rules are to not go through the woods and dances. Now people think that they are doing witchcraft.
Abigail Williams was historically quite different from how she was depicted in The Crucible and yet her character remained faithful to the original. The real Abigail Williams was only a child of eleven years old at the time of the Salem Witch Trials, not a teenage girl seeking revenge in order to be with the man that she loves (“About Abigail Williams”). Williams was likely an orphan as she lived with her uncle. Not much is known about her parents or how she came to live with Reverend Parris (“The “Afflicted””). Her lack of a stable two parent home may have contributed to her psychological need for attention and her role as the foremost of the “targeted” and “harassed” accusing girls.
In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, Abigail Williams was the start of the Salem Witch Trials. Abigail is an eighteen year old girl who lived in Salem in 1692. After her parents were killed by Indians, she was raised by her uncle, Reverend Parris. She worked as a servant for the Proctor’s before being kicked out by Elizabeth Proctor. Abigail was a troubled girl with a personality mixed with lust, vengefulness, and suspicion.
Analyzing the Crucible In Arthur Miller’s The Crucible, Abigail Williams was the cause of the Salem Witch Trials. Abigail was an 18 year old who lived with her uncle Rev.Parris & her cousin, Betty. Her parents got killed by Indians when she was very young. At one time she worked for the Proctors but, she had an affair with John Proctor.
In a small village called Salem, witchcraft and sorcery exist, however everyone is pointing fingers but not a single soul knows who is actually to blame for this nonsense. During this time period of hysteria, there are multiple scenes that are very questionable due to one person and one person only. Abigail is the one most responsible for the hysteria and witchcraft in Salem. She threatens the group of girls that accompanied her in the woods while they all danced. She has also lied about many things on multiple occasions in which causes an extreme amount of suspicion.
Abigail forces the girls of Salem to dance in the woods with her to help conjure spirits and make the charm to kill Goody Proctor. Abigail threatens the girls right after Betty took fright by saying, “let either of you breathe a word or the edge of a word about the other things and I will come to you in the black of some terrible night and I will bring a pointy reckoning that will shudder you.” (Miller, 144). Later on as the trials prolong Mary Warren turns on Abby and is telling the court that she lied. When Abigail then accuses Mary of witchcraft she turns back to Abby and obeys her once again.