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King Creon In Antigone

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King Creon once said “the inflexible heart breaks first”. In the greek tragedy Antigone, from the trilogy Oedipus Plays, by Sophocles King Creon is an extremely cruel man. King Creon rules his kingdom with fear and force. He is cold heartless, and selfish. These traits make his life end in immense tragedy. If people live their life without an ounce of compassion, sympathy, and empathy they will be lonely and miserable. In the beginning of Antigone Creon demands from all his citizens that no one buries the “traitor” Polyneices. Creon sends his son's bride to die in a cave alone, despite what others think. He also ignores his wife’s and his child’s requests and feelings. They both end up committing suicide.
Creon rules the country of Thebes. His hierarchy is fragile and his system is corrupt. His two nephews, Eteocles and Polyneices, went to battle against each other. Eteocles fought for Creon and Polyneices fought against him. Since Creon's hierarchy is already so fragile anyone who acts as a threat to his crown is considered a traitor and an outcast. Both Eteocles and Polyneices end up killing each other during their battle. Eteocles is given a proper burial ceremony, but Polyneices is left …show more content…
“ Who killed you son, so blindly and you, my wife - so blindly. Creon’s immediate family committed suicide because they felt insignificant. Haemon killed himself next to the body of Antigone. He originally went to save her, however Antigone had already hung herself. Creon’s wife, the queen, committed suicide after she heard the news of her son. She now felt she had nothing left to live for, since her beloved son had gone. At the end of this play King Creon realized that he had pushed many to the point of misery and to the extremity of suicide. He realizes how his way of ruling may not have been the best way. Creon ends up removing his crown, dropping it on the ground, and leaving Thebes for eternity, in major

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