Answer:
I believe the answer is C.
Explanation:
The court cannot place its own opinion over the opinion of the jury.
Which statement is symbolic of Reverend Hale’s change?
<span>Danforth: Marshal. Herrick stops. When did Reverend Hale arrive?
Herrick: It were toward midnight, I think.
Danforth, suspiciously: That is he about here?
Herrick: He goes among them that will hang, sir. And he prays with them. He sits with Goody Nurse now. And Mr. Parris with him.
</span>Hathorne: Let you question Hale, Excellency; I should not be surprised he have been preaching in Andover lately. Danforth: We’ll come to that; speak nothing of Andover. Parris prays with him. That’s strange.<span>Parris, prayerfully holding up his hands: Excellency, hear me. It is a providence. Reverend Hale has returned to bring Rebecca Nurse to God.</span><span>all of the above
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The right answer is: "The nurse does not know that Nora will leave her children, but the audience does."
When Torvald humiliates Nora, he tries to apologize with her, but she has changed, she realized her husband is a very strange man for her and in her marriage was always a doll, so she decided the only way to recognize herself is leaving from the house.
It contains an analogy, an allusion, and technical language.