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Responding to a quoteResponding to a quote  Establish context  Who said it?  To whom?  When?  Why?  Point out the literary device being employed.

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Presentation on theme: "Responding to a quoteResponding to a quote  Establish context  Who said it?  To whom?  When?  Why?  Point out the literary device being employed."— Presentation transcript:

1 Responding to a quoteResponding to a quote  Establish context  Who said it?  To whom?  When?  Why?  Point out the literary device being employed.  Explain the significance of this quote in terms of advancing the plot, developing character, exploring conflict, conveying theme, etc.  Reflect on what the quote means to your understanding of the work.

2 The quoteThe quote “We burn a hot fire here; it melts down all concealment.” Context: Danforth says this to Proctor after Mary Warren confesses that the calling out of names and the actions of being possessed by spirits “were pretense’ (82). Literary device: Verbal irony- Although Danforth claims that their strong sense of morality and justice will “[melt] down all concealment”, it actually blinds them to the truth of Mary Warren’s confession. Significance: This conveys the conflict between illusion and reality. The authorities in Salem so firmly believe in their judgment of the accused that they refuse to see the evidence in any other way.

3 The quote responseThe quote response Danforth’s statement that “We burn a hot fire here; it melts down all concealment” (83) suggests his firm belief in the justice and righteousness of the courts of Salem. When John Proctor suggests that Mary Warren “never saw no spirits” (81), Danforth is justifiably alarmed for his name is signed under numerous warrants of arrests as well as sentences for hanging. Danforth’s ironic statement highlights the court’s inability to see the truth in Mary Warren’s confession that all the accusations “were pretense” (82). Although Danforth may believe that the righteousness of the court will bring out the truth, the reality is that the righteousness of the court actually prevents it from believing the truth in Mary Warren’s words. Rather than the hot fire of truth melting down all concealment, it actually burns those who tell the truth as we see at the end of Act III when Danforth tells Mary Warren to recant her earlier statements otherwise, “[She] will confess [her]self or [she] will hang!” (109).


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