Answer:
He is trusting.
Explanation:
William Shakespeare's <em>The Tragedy of Julius Caesar</em> revolves around the murder of Julius Caesar by Brutus and Cassius and the fall of Rome to the numerous hands fighting for its power. This play works on the theme of loyalty, greed, honor, and power.
The given excerpt from Act III scene i of the play is from the scene where a servant of Mark Antony had arrived to relay a message to Brutus. <u>Brutus's response in allowing Antony to come view and mourn the death of Caesar and the promise of his safety shows he's a trusting guy</u>. Even though Cassius warns him against letting Antony give a speech as it might lead <em>"the people [be] moved by that which he will utter"</em>. Cassius has his reservations about letting Antony into Rome but Brutus, being the more trusting guy, allows him to be there with them even though he knows his (Antony) loyalty remains to Caesar.
The answer to that would be c
The correct answer is A. Subjective narrator.
When a narrator is subjective, this one expresses or adopts the point of view of a specific character in the story. He usually knows what the character feels or think, but not what the other characters maybe thinking or doing. He has a limited vision of what is occurring in the story.