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The Crucible Jealousy Quotes

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Betrayal Hysteria, revenge, and jealousy are all major characteristics that led to the downfall of many communities. These characteristics helped with the undoing of the community in The Crucible by Arthur Miller. Many of the same characteristics coincide with a novel written by Alexandre Dumas entitled The Count of Monte Cristo. The main character in Alexandre Dumas's novel is thrown into jail and is falsely accused by his jealous enemies. Both novels include characters that are betrayed by the feeling of jealousy, revenge, and mass hysteria. In Arthur Miller's, The Crucible, jealousy plays an important role of tearing apart the community of Salem, it creates an environment where people can act on their …show more content…

“I will come to you in the black of some terrible night and I will bring a pointy reckoning that will shudder you… I can make you wish you had never seen the sun go down” (Miller 19). This quote is said from Abigail to Elizabeth Proctor, the woman who is married to the man she loves, explaining how she will seek her vengeance on Elizabeth and how she wants her to be murdered. In The Count of Monte Cristo, revenge is the motive for the main character after he escapes from prison. “I regret now,” said he, “having helped you in your late inquiries, or having given you the information I did.” “Why so?” inquired Dantès. “Because it has instilled a new passion in your heart—that of vengeance.” (Dumas, 108). Faria, a man who was also imprisoned, told Dantès who had wrongly imprisoned him. This caused Dantès to want to find the men who framed him and murder them to fulfill his need for revenge. The need for revenge and fulfilling it may cause mass hysteria between a group or …show more content…

Although hysteria plays a major role in many moments of The Crucible there are specific examples, "I--I heard the other girls screaming, and you, Your Honor, you seemed to believe them, and I--It were only sport in the beginning sir, but then the whole world cried spirits, spirits, and I--I promise you, Mr. Danforth, I only thought I saw them but I did not." (Miller, 100). Here Tituba, a slave to one of the main characters, starts naming people who might be witches and is praised for it. Tituba began naming people in the town who had never participated in witchcraft before because she was in fear for life. In The Count of Monte Cristo hysteria is not as noticeable, but it is still in a very important scene in the novel. "When one thinks," said Caderousse, letting his hand drop on the paper, "there is here wherewithal to kill a man more sure than if we waited at the corner of a wood to assassinate him! I have always had more dread of a pen, a bottle of ink, and a sheet of paper, than of a sword or pistol." (Dumas, 23). In this moment of the novel hysteria has begun to spread in the group of men who wish to get rid of Dantès. All four men fell such an overwhelming feeling of hatred and jealousy towards Dantès that they act based on their feelings, and not their minds. Hysteria began the downfall of Dantès in The

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