Answer:
B
Explanation:
It doesn't make much sense
Brutus loves Caesar, and they are good friends, this is why Brutus was hesitant to plot of Cassius.
Option A
Explanation:
The plot of Cassius was to overthrow the most likely Julius Caesar from becoming the king. He was wandering along the Rome and gathering every senate member to fall to his plot. Most important of all, was Brutus, to whom, Cassius wanted the most to turn up against the Caesar.
Brutus was a loyal man to his land and to his friends. Caesar stands more lovable among them. This proved hesitant to Brutus but his love for Rome and for honor, was more and so he joined the plot of Cassius.
From the very beginning of the poem, Aeneas is aware that he has to follow the course of his destiny - and not the destiny he has chosen, but the one that was chosen for him (we might even say: imposed upon him) by the gods. However, even though he knows this, he is utterly unhappy about it and finds it difficult to leave behind everything that is dear to him. He sincerely grieves for his love with Dido, whom he has to leave. But in time, he gets to understand that his cause is a really worthy one.
The most significant shift in his character's development happens in Book 6, when he meets his father Anchises in the underworld. Anchises unravels to his son the future of the empire that he is to build. That is the decisive moment, when Aeneas realizes that all his personal sacrifice isn't for nothing. Hitherto, he had had many doubts and second thoughts about this sacrifice. But from that moment on, he will invest all his mental strength in his leadership, and commit fully and enthusiastically to his grand mission.
In grammar, the object is the thing that is being acted upon by the subject. Among the four options, the object is whom. This is because whom is a noun that is being acted on by a subject. The other three options are almost always used as subjects and not the object.