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read the excerpt from act 5, scene 3, of the tragedy of julius caesar. …

Question

read the excerpt from act 5, scene 3, of the tragedy of julius caesar. titinius. o cassius, brutus gave the word too early, who having some advantage on octavius took it too eagerly: his soldiers fell to spoil, whilst we by antony are all enclosed. enter pindarus pindarus. fly further off, my lord, fly further off, mark antony is in your tents, my lord: fly, therefore, noble cassius, fly far off. cassius. this hill is far enough. look, look, titinius, are those my tents where i perceive the fire? titinius. they are, my lord. cassius. titinius, if thou lovest me, mount thou my horse and hide thy spurs in him, till he have brought thee up to yonder troops what moral dilemma does this excerpt express? pindarus must decide whether to fight mark antony or flee. cassius must decide whether to fight mark antony or flee. pindarus must decide whether or not to send his best friend into the camp. cassius must decide whether or not to send his best friend into the camp.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The excerpt shows Cassius sees his tents burning and asks his trusted friend Titinius to ride into the enemy troops to investigate. Cassius faces a moral dilemma: sending his best friend into a dangerous, likely hostile camp risks Titinius's life, but he needs information about the enemy forces. The other options are incorrect: Pindarus only urges flight, no dilemma for him; the choice is not about fighting/fleeing, but sending Titinius.

Answer:

Cassius must decide whether or not to send his best friend into the camp.