Once she’s a part of the court, Mary seems to redeem her sense of pride and importance. She follows along with Abigail and the other girls, accusing the townspeople of witchcraft. But Mary is weak, timid, and easy to influence and is swept up in the hysteria of the trials. She worries about the consequences of conjuring and dancing. Witchery’s a hangin’ error, a hangin’ like they done in Boston two year ago” (Miller 18). Mary initially wants to tell the truth and cries, “Abby, we’ve got to tell. Mary Warren, the Proctors’ servant, experiences several changes in her character. Many characters change significantly throughout the play while several, on the contrary, do not undergo any changes in their character. This being said, developments in the characters’ personalities greatly impact the outcomes of the trials. In Arthur Miller’s portrayal of the Salem Witch Trials, The Crucible, the characters’ actions affect those around them and drive the hysteria. These accusations lead to mass hysteria and panic. In 1692 in the colonial town of Salem, Massachusetts, talk of witchcraft spread through the villagers like wildfire.
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