Discuss the significance of the title of the play ‘The Crucible’ by Arthur Miller. (P.U. 2004)
Arthur Miller uses the title of his play The Crucible as a Metaphor
constantly throughout the text. A crucible is a container used to heat
metals at a high temperature so the metal can be cast, often using
intense pressure to do so.
Crucibles are often also used to remove impurities from a substance, so
that only the pure matter remains. The relevance of the title is
apparent in many of the themes and issues of the play, and is
demonstrated through striking imagery and the actions of characters that
Miller portrays to us.
The
relevance of the play’s title becomes evident during the first act, as
we gradually piece together the information concerning the girls
dancing. The kettle viewed by Reverend Parris, a argumentative and
unreasonable man in his middle forties, mirrors
a crucible. We are told that the girls had made a brew that contained a
little frog and blood. This concoction was viewed by the characters
involved as a potent, fearsome mixture and this signifies the beginning of the Salem tragedy.
It seems that from this ‘brew’ a more sinister force is released, or
metaphorically speaking, the impurities are released due to the aid of a
crucible.
The dancing and the contents of the little pot seem to fuel the rumours, lies and tragedy of Salem. Suspicion
soon engulfs the community and the little privacy that once existed
suddenly shatters. Privacy was quickly interpreted to mean that people
had some terrible fault to hide and there was an intense pressure for
neighbours to reveal each other’s sins. Here is evidence of how the
play’s title is reflected in the actions and words of the characters.
In fact, Reverend Parris makes an ironic comment that is closely linked with the The Crucible:
Reverend Parris: Why, Rebecca, we may open up the boil of all our troubles today because
in the end the witchcraft investigation provokes the burning down and destruction of the
community. Here The Crucible is once again used metaphorically to illustrate characters
beliefs. The use of such words as ‘boil’ and ‘burning down’ are directly linked with the image
of a crucible at work.
The
witch trials are also metaphorically a crucible for people’s grudges,
and their seeking of revenge. The play shows us also how people can give
into their fear and superstition. Salem quickly turns into a melting pot of suspicion and vengeance
with nearly everyone trying to pull power out of the pot. The witch
trials provided an avenue to bring hostilities out into the open in a
theocratic society that had little opportunity for speaking out.
The
trials are not really about witchcraft. Abigail Williams, a strikingly
pretty seventeen-year-old orphan, admits to John Proctor, a
well-respected farmer in his mid thirties, how the witchery is a hoax:
Abigail: We were dancing in the woods last night and my uncle leaped out on us. She took fright, is all’.
Furthermore,
the relationship between Abigail and Proctor is highlighted using
imagery connected to the concept of a crucible. The relationship, based
more on lust than love, is one that Proctor dearly regrets and that
constantly plays on his conscience. Heat and fire can be used as symbols
that are strongly connected with a crucible, and Miller uses this
symbolism cleverly:
Abigail: ‘… you clutched my back behind your house and sweated like a stallion whenever I came near!’
And later,
Abigail: ‘I have a sense for heat, John … and I have seen you … burning in your loneliness.’
The
relationship can be likened to the concept of a crucible because it
represents the high temperatures and reactions that take place in a
crucible. The relationship between Abigail and John is shown in great
contrast with his wife Elizabeth, a cold and unforgiving woman. The
relationship between John and Elizabeth is cold, distant and tense, with
no passion or fire. However, despite his feelings of passion for
Abigail, Proctor realises that he must not succumb to them again. This
decision effectively ends their relationship and extinguishes the heat
between them.
Fire and heat is used as a symbol once again in Act Three. The Crucible metaphor is illustrated in the play when Judge Danforth, a strict judge with a strong belief in authority, says to Proctor,
Danforth: ‘We burn a hot fire here; it melts down all concealment’.
The court scenes were times of tension, intensity, pressure and conflicts between powerful authorities refusing to realise they have signed away innocent lives on the strength
of a lie. Also things are permanently and physically changed in a
crucible, when they are turned from one thing into another. This is
reflected in the play by the fact that many characters in the play are
exposed to high pressures during the trial. This pushes many characters
to the limits of reason and changes them mentally, physically and
spiritually.
Another
parallel between the word crucible and the play is the fact that a
meaning of the word crucible is a severe test or trial. When John
Proctor is convicted of witchery he wrestles with his conscience about
whether he should confess or be hanged. His internal conflict between
the opportunity to protect himself at the expense of others weighs
heavily on his mind, but he chooses the ultimate sacrifice – his life.
He asks his wife towards the end of The Crucible:
Proctor: ‘Would you give them such as lie? You would not; if tongs of fire were singeing you, you would not’.
This
makes it evident that Proctor recognises his own shortcomings and once
again conjures the image of fire that is closely related to a crucible.
Miller also uses the text to make connections between Salem and Hell.
Proctor: ‘A fire, a fire is burning! I hear the boot of Lucifer, I see his filthy face! …. And we will burn, we will burn together!’
Here Miller makes the ultimate connection between the play’s title The Crucible and the society he is portraying. The intense heat and pressure of Hell is also present in a crucible, and both can be associated with the hysteria and suspicion of the people in Salem during the witch trials.
The obvious relevance of The Crucible
can be found at the very core of the text. A crucible can be used to
separate and discard impurities the in a substance – in effect, that was
the essence of the Salem witch trials. In an attempt to separate the ‘good from the bad’, many respectable and virtuous people were hung due to the mass hysteria and pressure caused by ‘The Crucible’ of the times.
By reflecting his play’s powerful and effective title throughout the text, Miller prompts his audience to apply his metaphor
to other situations in history. It was most certainly Miller’s own
experiences during the ‘communist hunt’ of the 1950’s that provoked him
to write this play. Miller saw the parallels between the McCarthy era
and the Salem
witch hunts for what they really were – a crucible. Severe trials held
in an attempt to separate the good from the evil, the pure from the
tainted. Through his text, he shows the frailty and vulnerability of
human nature by showing how hypocrisy and hysteria can lead to times of suspicion
and instability. He leaves us, his audience, to make our own judgement
about similar periods in history and to ask ourselves the question – Is
it possible, or even predictable, that this situation will ever occur
again?
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