the answer is tutti
Oedipus accuses Creon of bribing Tiresias in an effort to take the crown.
That everyone else dies is what happens to Theban King Creon's family by the time that the play "Antigone" ends.Specifically, there are only three members left in Creon's family when the play begins: his wife Theban Queen Eurydice, his son and heir apparent Haemon, and himself. But Haemon kills himself because Creon sentences Antigone, his own niece and future daughter-in-law, to death. Then the Queen kills herself once she learns that the last of her four children is now dead. So Creon ends the play all alone since his family would rather commit suicide than spend one more minute in his presence.
Antigone, Teiresias the blind prophet, and Theban King Creon don't talk all together about profit and loss in monetary terms. They aren't all on the stage at the same time in 'Antigone'. In fact, playwright Sophocles [496 B.C.E.* - 406 B.C.E.] doesn't give Antigone and Teiresias any opportunity in which to interact. Creon is the only character of the three who gets to interact with everyone else.
That hes gonna tell him its time to come out of the closet
Neither Antigone or Creon is a dignified superior character in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone and King Creon deliberately behave badly towards each other. Neither one comports him or herself in a fashion that can be called dignified or superior. The phrase may be applied to the chorus leader, who is the only character to behave in a consistently controlled way. Everyone else resorts to emotional outbursts at one time or another.
Oedipus accuses Creon of bribing Tiresias in an effort to take the crown.
Ponyboy couldn't concentrate in school because Johnny and Dally died.
That everyone else dies is what happens to Theban King Creon's family by the time that the play "Antigone" ends.Specifically, there are only three members left in Creon's family when the play begins: his wife Theban Queen Eurydice, his son and heir apparent Haemon, and himself. But Haemon kills himself because Creon sentences Antigone, his own niece and future daughter-in-law, to death. Then the Queen kills herself once she learns that the last of her four children is now dead. So Creon ends the play all alone since his family would rather commit suicide than spend one more minute in his presence.
Antigone, Teiresias the blind prophet, and Theban King Creon don't talk all together about profit and loss in monetary terms. They aren't all on the stage at the same time in 'Antigone'. In fact, playwright Sophocles [496 B.C.E.* - 406 B.C.E.] doesn't give Antigone and Teiresias any opportunity in which to interact. Creon is the only character of the three who gets to interact with everyone else.
12 ... 10 punt returns and 2 kickoff returns.
That hes gonna tell him its time to come out of the closet
Neither Antigone or Creon is a dignified superior character in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone and King Creon deliberately behave badly towards each other. Neither one comports him or herself in a fashion that can be called dignified or superior. The phrase may be applied to the chorus leader, who is the only character to behave in a consistently controlled way. Everyone else resorts to emotional outbursts at one time or another.
Creon grants Medea's request to stay another day to prepare for her life of exile because he does not believe Medea capable of committing treachery in such a short time.
Revenge on Laius' killer, who is Oedipus, but nobody knows at the time.
Well, honey, Creon's punishment for Antigone hasn't changed one bit. He sentenced her to be buried alive in a tomb, and last time I checked, that's still the plan. So, to answer your question, there's been zero change in Creon's punishment for poor Antigone.
no
TIME