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Antigone Creon Tragic Hero Quotes

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In the play Antigone written by Sophocles, Creon is the tragic hero. Creon was a king. His tragic flaw was that he has too much pride and this causes a downfall for him. Creon will not listen to anyone. He is very stubborn and he doesn’t notice that he might be doing the wrong thing. Creon said, “Let him do, or dream to do, more than a man can. He shall not save these girls from death” (i.628-629). Creon said this because he is making sure no one will help the girls because they did a bad thing in Creon’s eyes. Creon had a free choice. His free choice was to either listen or ignore the Sentry. The Sentry came to Creon to tell him that Polyneices was getting buried by his sister Antigone. Creon didn’t believe it. He said harshly, “You’re figure of speech may entertain you now; but unless you bring me the man, you will get very little profit from them in the end” (i.271-273). …show more content…
Creon got what he deserved. His son who is Haimon was going to marry Antigone. Creon was planning to kill Antigone but Haimon didn’t want him to. Haimon, who disagrees with his father warns him that he was going to kill himself if his father locked Antigone in a cave with no food or water. Haimon threatens Creon, “Then she must die.----But her death will cause Another” (ode ii.610). This quote explains that Antigone will die and so will Haimon if Creon doesn’t listen. Creon's punishment was that Haimon killed himself because he was too stubborn. Creon had finally increased his awareness to his leadership and

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