Preview

Danforth's Witch Hunt, Is It J

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
510 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Danforth's Witch Hunt, Is It J
Danforth's Witch Hunt, Is it Justified? (An Essay on the Crucible) I write in response to your column regarding Judge Danforth's actions during the witch trials in Salem. Surprisingly, you praised Judge Danforth for his "impartiality and tact" during this tragic set of trials. You could not be farther from the truth. Judge Danforth abused his judicial power, throughout the trials, to the fullest of his abilities. His abuses range from berating and coercing witness into saying what he wants them go, to blatantly ignoring testimony that refuted the accusers. He presides over his courtroom as if he has divine right. Judges are supposed to find truth, not invent it. When Mary Warren confessed to Danforth that she, along with the other accusers were sporting, he refused to believe her. To think. that he would obviously ignore her is just beyond my comprehension. he did this simply to save face. To listen to Mary and admit the court system had been wrong was not a choice. Because of this and many other miscalculations on Danforth's part numerous people lost their lives. In addition to this, Judge Danforth has chose, very biasedly, what to admit as evidence. He used that power whenever he sought fit. When Giles Corey lacks the evidence to prove that Thomas Putnam hath prompted his daughter to falsely cry witchery on George Jacobs, Danforth dismisses the claim. Why you say? The lack of tangible evidence, yet when the young harlots claimed that invisible spirits of Salem community members attacked them, Danforth used it as evidence, that proved to be damning. Hypocrisy, like this, in the judicial system is inexcusable. Lastly, Judge Danforth hath condemned people before they were allowed trial. The accused witches were given the choice, confess or hang. This is condemnation ultimately. Either way, their decision has no good outcome. If they confess to witchery they will be blackballed from the community and shunned, if they refuse to

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    During this time, the city was governed by the church and a massive witch hunt took where people were condemned for being pawns of the Devil. Officials in Salem authorized many of the witch trials and sent dozens of accused witches to die. Deputy Governor Danforth was one of them. He showed no signs of backing down from his cause. “[D]o you know that near to four hundred are in jails . . . upon my signature? . . . And seventy-two condemned to hang by that signature” (Miller, 91)? This was not because he was evil, but because he believed he was righteous. His intentions were good because he truly believed he was saving Salem, but his actions, as seen today, were evil. Another authority figure who believes they are doing good and perpetuates the Salem Witch Trials is Judge Hathorne. “Why at every execution I have seen naught but high satisfaction in the town” (Miller, 133). Hathorne, like Danforth, believes he is on a Holy Crusade that will move Salem out of the Devil’s hands, and into God’s grace. These authority figures in The Crucible illustrate how values change over time. The society they lived in had different values than society does today. Because of this, they acted accordingly with their ideas of good and evil and cannot be judged by people…

    • 1002 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The role of the judge is to present the fact, formalize the event, and to organize the jury. “You may perhaps wish to hear from me exactly what is meant by those words ‘reasonable doubt’” (Sayers 3). At this point in the case, the judge is teaching the jury how to decide whether or not a person is innocent, guilty or proven not guilty. In my opinion I believe that the judge is biased. Shortly after describing the death of Philip Boyes by arsenical poison, he accuses Harriet Vane of being the murder. He says that is a fact she killed him and that the problem to solve in this case is whether or not she murdered him with intent or on accident. The judge at this point is teaching the jury about the case and what they are supposed to agree on to make the final decision whether or not Harriet…

    • 914 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Court only wanted what was best for society during this time. The majority ruling of the case…

    • 1584 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    n The Crucible by Arthur Miller, the court and its judges use the fallacy of the undistributed middle to attain the conclusions they desire. In order to arrest people, Judge Danforth creates conditions where citizens who oppose the court fall under suspicion, and threatens those who might oppose him with, “No uncorrupted man may fear this court”(98). Because the court assumes that all people who fear the court are witches, instead of all witches also happen to fear the court, many people innocently oppose the court’s ways and suffer. Miller uses the fallacy of the undistributed middle to show the dangers of assuming. Those who wish to avoid false conclusions should know the difference between causation and…

    • 118 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Arthur Miller's The Crucible and the Witch Trials began with a few young children, Abigail Williams, Marry Warren and Mercy Lewis, accusing some of the town's women of dancing and chanting in the woods. This was the basis for all their evidence, a few children's stories. In addition, both the incidences had leaders that fed and fueled the hysteria. During the Witch Trials, one of the main "Hanging Judges" was Danforth. He was a main contributor to the hysteria and fear of witches that swelled throughout the communities. Though Danforth did not directly accuse people of practicing witchcraft, he chose to believe the fits that the children of the jury put on in the court. The Children were believed to be innocent and it was given that their voice was the word of god.…

    • 492 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the play The Crucible there was a character that was afraid to admit they were wrong. In this particular case, Governor Danforth was afraid to admit he was wrong when accusing people of witchcraft. In the play, Danforth was the judge that determined who was a witch in Salem and who was not. If someone was accused of being a witch and they admitted to it they got to live. However if someone was accused of being a witch and denied it they were hung or killed.…

    • 345 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    His arrogance makes him rely on persuasion and information from others. Most of his sources of information and accusations comes from the girls. Danforth can be easily convinced and sticks to tradition by the book. This shows that he has a difficult time coming up with his own opinion and tends to look at others, specifically a group, of people and believes them. Abigail’s impressive deceitful actions and assertive attitude makes her seem more reliable than Proctor, in Danforth’s eyes. This is another way that shows Danforth is conflicted and doesn’t know who to believe. At the end of the play, It would ruin Danforth’s reputation if John Proctor had proved his judgements wrong. Danforth would, essentially, have wrongly murdered many people and would never be able to show his work or face again. This a valid reason why Danforth avoids the truth and decides to let Proctor accept his own…

    • 547 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In addition, Danforth did not allow people to have their own opinions about the court of Salem. He suppressed the individual freedom of a person to have their own attitude about the court and express that opinion. Danforth believed that “a person is either with this court or he must be counted against it, there is no road in between” (Miller 94). He did not anyone to go against his opinion and if they did, he saw it as a rebellion against the court. As a result of this, he even went on to say that “if retaliation is your fear, know this- I should hang ten thousand that dared to rise against the law” (Miller 129). He was not afraid to make his opinion known and to threaten the people of Salem. Danforth did not want to be proven wrong by anyone.…

    • 202 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Salem Witchcraft Trials have cast a spell over historians and non-academics alike. This episode…

    • 124 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The events of this essay closely reflect those of which the Salem witch trials possessed. In both cases the accused faced executions after being accused of crimes, guilty or not, due to accusations of large groups of people. The large groups in these events were simply the majority and contesting their claims was simply unattainable. Sadly the accusers couldn’t have came up with an alternative punishment to death, but in both events they seemed to make examples of the accused and show that they would not tolerate the same actions from anyone else.…

    • 535 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Reverend Hale vs. himself, Judge Danforth, and Judge Hawthorne- Hale knows there is no God present in witch-hunting and he questions his motives as well.…

    • 283 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Suzanne was questioned by the court of Rieux, France, strapped down, and basically forced to confess that she practiced witchcraft. Later, she recanted this statement, and stated that she was no lover of (the devil), and is not a witch, all the while struggling to cry. In these days, this was thought to be a sign of witchcraft. She also stated that when she was originally asked, she was forced to say that she was a witch. In this time confession was necessecary for conviction, but after she was subjected to torture she went back to her original story and said that she was not forced, and that she declared to be a witch without threat. Once put on the stretching rack, she stated that she had confessed to practicing witchcraft, but confessed her innocence and screamed the name of Jesus and Our Lady of Grace, saying nothing more. Eventually, she maintained the fact that she was a witch. When asked how long she had been dealing with the devil, she stated that it was 20 years ago when the devil first appeared to her, in the form of a little man dressed in cow-hide and black breeches. In the end, she made people to believe she was ill, and not another word was spoken from her.…

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    During the Salem witch trials the defense you receive was very limited. When you where arrested it was solely based on accusation and no solid evidence that you where a witch. The court was ran on the opinions of women that felt threated of other women. Those accused of being a witch where not required to have a lawyer. The accused had very little chance of leaving the courtroom alive if a child spoke at their trial because the children at the time where thought of as innocent and unable to do any wrong. In todays courtrooms it is highly advised to have a solid defense or case. In the courtrooms your trial is most of the time tried by a jury one of the luxuries that the 5th amendment gives us. Even before we get to the trial there must be hard evidence that the accused had something to do with the crime otherwise the person must be let free. If the person accused of the crime is truly guilty the punishment must fit the crime as stated in the 8th Amendment. Say if you where convicted of petty theft you wouldn’t get the death penalty, but if you did that in 1690 you probably dead.…

    • 662 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the winter of 1692 and 1693 mass hysteria broke out in a small colonial town of Salem village. Family members were being accused, and neighbors were accusing each other of casting spells, corseting with the devil, and being witches. This was only new in America; France, Italy, Germany, and England it has been going on for more than 300 years. Between, 1400-1600, thousands of people were accused and killed for being witches. The reasoning behind the killing was that in the Christian Bible, Exodus 22:18 “Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.” The early Christian was accepting of all pagan religion, but the Roman Catholic Church saw them as heretics and enemies of the church. In 1231 Pope Gregory IX stared The Inquisition to flush out the heretics, but in 1484 Pope Innocent VIII declared witchcraft heresy, and the punishment was death (http://www.unexplainedstuff.com). The witch hunts were often done by scared and frighten villagers. If you did not like someone or they did something to wrong you, you could accuse them of being a witch. The local government did very little to stop this, but you could not go around accusing people of being a witch, you needed evidence to prove that they were a witch. A book was published in1486 called ‘The Malleus Maleficarum” or “The Witch Hammer” was a guide book to find witches. It gave the definition of witchcraft and the way to trial and judge cases of witchcraft. A few ways the book said that you could tell if the person is a witch…

    • 1577 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Adults

    • 387 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Morris Kent was 16 years old when police arrested and charged him for multiple counts of burglary, robbery, and rape. The teen was already on probation in Washington D.C. for prior burglaries and theft. The prosecutor on the case wanted Kent's trial to happen in adult court. His reasons included Kent's criminal history and the serious nature of the current charges. Kent's lawyer, of course, wanted the case to stay in juvenile court. Had the judge allowed a hearing, Kent's lawyer would have argued that his client was mentally ill. He would have said this fact should be considered before determining which trial court to use. Yet the judge made the decision without holding a hearing. The adult court tried Kent and found him guilty of the charges. His sentence was 30 to 90 years in prison. In his appeal, Kent argued that the case should have stayed in juvenile court.…

    • 387 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays