<span>The trials were rapid.
Any person who suspected that some unfortunate event or development was the
work of a witch, could bring the charge to a native judge. The judge
would have the suspected evil-doer halted and brought in for public cross-examination,
where the suspect was advised to admit.
Whatever his or her response, if the charge of witchery was believed to be reliable,
the suspect was turned over to a higher court and brought before a grand body
of people </span>sworn
to give a verdict in a legal case based on evidence submitted to them in court.
More of the evidence used in the court case was the testament of the
accuser.<span> If more proof was needed, the jury
might consider the witch cake, a strange mixture that was made from wheatlike cereal meal and urine of the sorceress’ victim and fed to a dog.</span><span>
Eating the cake was supposed to wound the sorceress, whose cry of agony would deceive
her secret individuality.</span>
Answer:
none of them are underlined...?
Explanation:
The tone and the fact that the narrator says "she'd miss me", drives you to think that the narrator assumes that she will never see Denise again, i.e option D.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
It has been long time since I read it. prob wrong
Iambic pentameter contains 10 syllables per line, while prose contains no limit on syllables per line.