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Antigone


God has gone through the whole range of sufferings and piled them all on us, -grief upon grief, humiliation upon humiliation"(1042). This just shows how terrible fate has treated the family of Oedipus. Creon has a different fate, one that he brought upon himself but it is much more dour than anyone else's. Creon's fate was to lose all of all of his family and the rest of his life knowing it was his entire fault because of his selfish actions and his stubborn ways. In the end of the play Creon says, "Nobody else to share the blame. Just me . . . I killed you. I killed you my dear"(1078-1079). .
             Pride acts as another major theme; it is what got Creon in this situation in the first place. Creon has too much pride to admit to anyone that maybe he was wrong. Even when he has Antigone he has too much pride to let her go. Creon's own son questions him and he replies, "Am I to stand here and be lectured to by a kid? A man of my experience"(1063)!Creon shows that here he is too proud to change his decision for his own son even if he made the wrong choice. The king's friend the Leader tries to convince Creon to change his mind by telling him "My king, ever since he began I've been debuting in my mind, could this possibly be the work of the gods"(1050). The Leader was trying to tell Creon maybe the gods did have something to do with it and still this does not convince the pride filled king to change his mind. After Creon has captured Antigone and has sentenced her to die the blind prophet, Teiresias, tries to get Creon to change his mind. Teiresias went to Creon and informed him of his wrong doings and told Creon that his actions would result in terrible things that are going to come back to him. Even the blind prophet could not change the strong-minded and the pride filled decision of the king, Creon. Creon's pride filled and stubborn decision led him to what he received and ultimately he led himself to his terrible fate.


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