A cave/ jail so that the king didnt have to juat kill her he could say she died on her own
Sorry,i don't know,i an chinese.
Justin Hentges gets shot.
The flaw in Antigone that the chorus pointed out to her in Scene 4, line 45 was her lack of respect for human laws. This flaw would lead to her death, and the chorus blamed Antigone for her own demise.
In Act 2 Scene 4 they certainly do discuss the events of the night.
In Act 2 Scene 4 they certainly do discuss the events of the night.
Sorry,i don't know,i an chinese.
nothing the movie sucked
Justin Hentges gets shot.
The flaw in Antigone that the chorus pointed out to her in Scene 4, line 45 was her lack of respect for human laws. This flaw would lead to her death, and the chorus blamed Antigone for her own demise.
The chorus feels for her, but also tells her that it is not fate (as she thinks) but her own actions that have brought on her present situation.
In Act 2 Scene 4 they certainly do discuss the events of the night.
In Act 2 Scene 4 they certainly do discuss the events of the night.
It is by setting in motion and bringing about Creon's reversal that the characters in scene 4 contribute to the plot of "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Teiresias the blind prophet and the Chorus leader are the characters who interact with Theban King Creon in the fourth scene. Teiresias makes Creon's reversal possible by warning him that the mourning that goes around Thebes will come back around to Creon's own household. The chorus leader then puts the reversal in effect by successfully counseling Creon to annul the non-burial edict, bury Polyneices and free Princess Antigone.
Scene 4 of Romeo and Juliet takes place at dawn. At the beginning of the scene, Romeo and Juliet debate over whether the birds song they hear is a nightingale or a lark.. This means the night was just turning to morning.
Omnibus - 1952 Antigone 3-4 was released on: USA: 21 November 1954
I assume it's Act 4 Scene 3 you are talking about. At the beginning of the scene Sebastian has a soliloquy in which he is musing about Olivia's treatment of him as if she knows him well, when he doesn't know her at all. He concludes, "I am mad or else the lady's mad." He is interrupted by Olivia, accompanied by a priest, who asks him to marry her. And he says yes.
It is unknown what Antigone feels about the chorus in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone has little interaction with the chorus other than in Scene 4 when she is led to the remote cave in which she will be walled up and buried alive. She makes no insulting or passionate remarks against the chorus members or its leaders. It therefore seems that at best she honors them as her city's wise, respected, accomplished elders and at worst she considers them too afraid to stand up against King Creon and for the gods and Theban traditions until it is too late.