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  1. 6 The Crucible and they had to be to survive the life they had chosen or been born into in this country. The proof of their belief’s value to them may be taken from the opposite character of the first Jamestown settlement, farther south, in Virginia. The Englishmen who landed there were motivated mainly by a hunt for profit. They

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  2. Act Four (A cell in Salem jail, that fall. At the back is a high barred window; near it, a great, heavy door. Along the walls are two benches. The place is in darkness but for the moonlight seeping through the bars. It appears empty. Presently footsteps are heard coming down a corridor beyond the wall, keys rattle, and the door swings open.

  3. www.derrickallums.com › learning › wp-contentAct Four

    Act Four 1090-1104 U6P2SEL-845816.indd 1090 4/15/06 12:43:23 AM. ARTHUR MILLER 1091 DANFORTH. ... National Theater Production of The Crucible by Arthur Miller ...

  4. THE CRUCIBLE ACT IV Herrick: I’ll fetch him. He starts for the door. Danforth: Marshal. Herrick stops. When did Reverend Hale arrive? Herrick: It were toward midnight, I think. Danforth,...

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  6. ia600905.us.archive.org › 22 › itemsTHE CRUCIBLE

    ACT II—Scene 2: Ihe vestry of the Salem Meeting House, two weeks later. ACT II—Scene 3: A cell in Salem jail, three months later. The Play Service hereby acknowledges with grateful thanks the friendly help of Mr. Leonard Patrick, production stage manager of the Broadway production, for his aid in preparing this acting edition. 4

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