The correct answer is 4: Cassius cannot believe that a weakling like Caesar has become so great. Cassius complains of being forced to bow before Caesar (he "must bend his body If Caesar carelessly but nod on him"), and the fact that Caesar has suffered from fevers and seizures makes his submission to him all the more enraging. Cassius does not believe himself to be less than any other man, much less one who has such weak health.
Answer:
misunderstood
Explanation: get wrecked noob
Poe describes the architecture of the house of Usher, on one hand, and the natural environment surrounding it, on the other; this refers to the parrallelism of the clauses introduced by the preposition "of". He introduces a further parallelism, in the man-made order of the stones that make up the walls, and in the natural decay in the form of fungi. The decay of this building, i.e. of artifice, mirrors the decay in nature, shown in the tres, that give a feeling of stillness through their "long undisturbed endurance", are in turn mirrored in the waters of the tarn. Thus, the parallelism gives an impression of mutual reflection of decayed artifice nad decayed nature, which in the rest of the story will be paralleled with that of the persons of Roderick and Madeleine Usher and their house.