Elliot (2 hearts) - Will get jealous if given a gift. Leah (8 hearts) - Will not get jealous if given a gift. Penny (8 hearts) - Will not get jealous if given a gift. Abigail (8 hearts) - Will not get jealous if given a gift.
In The Crucible, The addiction Abigail Williams has for John Proctor's heart has led her to be very jealousy towards Elizabeth Proctor. She is jealous of the love and attention she gets from John. Abby's envy towards Elizabeth Proctor causes suspense and dramatic tension between Abby, Elizabeth, and John.
In addition to trying to kill her off, another example of envy that Abby had towards Goody Proctor is when Abigail charges her of murder in act 2: “Why, Abigail Williams charge[s] her? ” (859). This scene is where Cheever comes to arrest Goody Proctor for attempted murder of Abigail using a poppet.
During the time of the witch trials, many people were accused of being a witch or doing witchcraft and many of these accusations were fueled by past grudges. In The Crucible, Abigail has a grudge against Elizabeth, who is married to John Proctor, because she is jealous that Elizabeth is with him and Abigail loves John.
In a sense, The Crucible has the structure of a classical tragedy, with John Proctor as the play's tragic hero. Honest, upright, and blunt-spoken, Proctor is a good man, but one with a secret, fatal flaw.
Abigail, Putnam, and other characters from The Crucible find the witch trials beneficial. The jealous Abi finds her way out of trouble by accusing other people. With this power in hand, she attacks Elizabeth with accusation because of her lingering jealousy and lust for Proctor.
She finds herself attracted to Proctor while working in the Proctor home. According to the Puritanical mindset, Abigail's attraction to Proctor constitutes a sin, but one that she could repent of and refuse to acknowledge. Abigail does the opposite. She pursues Proctor and eventually seduces him.
Abigail flirts with John Proctor. She tries to get him to admit that he still wants her and expresses anger toward his wife for “blackening” her name in the village. Abigail admits to Proctor that Betty is just pretending.
Abigail admits that she has given herself to the Devil by writing her name in his book. She renounces the Devil and says that she wants "the sweet love of Jesus." Abigail also claims to have seen Goody Good and Goody Osburn with the Devil, along with Bridget Bishop.
The conversation reveals that approximately seven months earlier, Abigail and Proctor had an affair while Abigail lived and worked in the Proctor household. Goody Proctor subsequently dismissed Abigail. Now Abigail accuses Proctor of still being in love with her, even though he will not admit it to her or himself.
Abigail strikes Betty across the face and warns the other girls to confess only that they danced and that Tituba conjured Ruth's dead sisters. She threatens to kill them if they breathe a word about the other things that they did.
Abigail denies she has done anything wrong and blames Elizabeth entirely. Readers will soon learn that Abigail did have an affair with John Proctor, but this moment shows how much Abigail hates Elizabeth Proctor as well as her willingness to lie.
Many of the characters are motivated by jealousy and greed in The Crucible. Abigail is motivated by jealousy of Elizabeth Proctor; she wants Elizabeth to die so she can marry John, Elizabeth's husband.
4 He Has A Crush On Abigail
To learn all the details of Sebastian's crush on Abigail, a player would need to marry several different bachelor(ette)s.
Throughout the hysteria, Abigail's motivations never seem more complex than simple jealousy and a desire to have revenge on Elizabeth Proctor. The language of the play is almost biblical, and Abigail seems like a biblical character—a Jezebel figure, driven only by sexual desire and a lust for power.
Readers first encounter Elizabeth through the words of Abigail, who describes Elizabeth as a “bitter woman, a lying, cold, sniveling woman.” When Elizabeth enters the action of the play in the second act, we immediately see that Abigail is the liar: Elizabeth is anything but bitter and sniveling.
Abigail is responsible for witchcraft because she was a liar. Abigail is a lair because she told Hale and Paris that Tituba forced the girls drink blood “she makes me drink blood” (Miller 187).
Nick. Nick and Abigail both have crushes each other at the beginning of the game, but are too shy to make any move. However, Nick soon is given the perfect opportunity to try to show his feelings to Abigail as they gather kindling.
Abigail and the other girls are afraid of being caught experimenting with witchcraft. Abigail has a pretty pronounced fear of abandonment. The whole town is afraid of the Devil invading Salem or false accusations of witchcraft that lead to whippings, hangings, and imprisonment.
Abagail was kicked out of the Proctors house after Elizabeth found out that her husband an affair with Abagail. The affair caused Abagail to develop an infatuation with John Proctor, she became obsessed with him.
The Crucible
John Proctor is a tormented individual. He believes his affair with Abigail irreparably damaged him in the eyes of God, his wife Elizabeth, and himself. True, Proctor did succumb to sin and commit adultery; however, he lacks the capacity to forgive himself.
Throughout the play “The Crucible” jealousy from young Abigail Williams causes hysteria to take over Salem, while she blames people just so she could have a chance to get what she wants. Then causing others to follow along with her actions, scared to be her next victim.
In the Puritan New England town of Salem, Massachusetts, a group of girls goes dancing in the forest with a black slave named Tituba. While dancing, they are caught by the local minister, Reverend Parris.