Antigone is written by Sophocles. It's about how great man is.
Shakespeare didn't write Antigone. Sophocles did.
In the Greek play Antigone by Sophocles, the choral leader (Senator 1) compares Antigone to her father and half-brother, Oedipus."Lo you, the spirit stout of her stout father's child-- unapt to bend beneath misfortune!"
Haemon's defense of Antigone and the choral odesare my favorite parts of "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, it is educational and entertaining to read the choral odes. The odes lead the audience through cultural and historical elaborations of and parallels to offstage and onstage events. Additionally, Theban Prince Haemon modernizes the play in his realistic defense of Antigone, his beloved first cousin and bride-to-be.
No, "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.) is not a poem.Instead, "Antigone" is a dramatic form of literature that is called a play, often to be performed on a stage before a live audience. Its genre is tragedy, because it tells of the unfortunate turns in the lives of Theban Princess Antigone and of her close relatives within the Theban royal house. The story is told as a play and therefore in prose, but choral interludes between the play's scens incorporate poems.
Shakespeare wrote his first play for the same reason he wrote all of them--for money.
the play :)
In the Greek play Antigone by Sophocles, the choral leader (Senator 1) compares Antigone to her father and half-brother, Oedipus."Lo you, the spirit stout of her stout father's child-- unapt to bend beneath misfortune!"
Haemon's defense of Antigone and the choral odesare my favorite parts of "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, it is educational and entertaining to read the choral odes. The odes lead the audience through cultural and historical elaborations of and parallels to offstage and onstage events. Additionally, Theban Prince Haemon modernizes the play in his realistic defense of Antigone, his beloved first cousin and bride-to-be.
No, "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.) is not a poem.Instead, "Antigone" is a dramatic form of literature that is called a play, often to be performed on a stage before a live audience. Its genre is tragedy, because it tells of the unfortunate turns in the lives of Theban Princess Antigone and of her close relatives within the Theban royal house. The story is told as a play and therefore in prose, but choral interludes between the play's scens incorporate poems.
The first person mentioned in the book "Antigone" is Antigone herself, who is the daughter of Oedipus and the sister of Ismene. She is a central character in the play by Sophocles.
We don't know exactly what Shakespeare's first play was, so we cannot answer questions about it.
Shakespeare wrote his first play for the same reason he wrote all of them--for money.
No.
We can't answer this because we don't know which was Shakespeare's first play, or what he liked about anything, including any of his plays.
1369
Nobody knows for sure which of Shakespeare's early plays was the first, nevermind when it was first performed.
own this choral music and wish to practice here How do we play it?
It is not recorded.