Creon thinks that the sentry is been resposible for burying the body.
He listens to Tiresias who told Creon to think of what he has done.
The sentry brings news that the body of Polyneices has had dust spread over it so that it may pass safely through to the underworld. Creon is overtaken with rage and tells the messenger that if he doesn't find who did this than he would be killed.
i think so
Creon tells the guard to go find who is responsible for burying Polynises. If the guard does not find who is responsible with in a certain amount of time, the guard will suffer the consequences of a slow, painful death in place of the person who buried Polynises.
bcuh creon loves the power that he has he likes bein entitled to things like this
He listens to Tiresias who told Creon to think of what he has done.
The sentry brings news that the body of Polyneices has had dust spread over it so that it may pass safely through to the underworld. Creon is overtaken with rage and tells the messenger that if he doesn't find who did this than he would be killed.
i think so
Creon tells the guard to go find who is responsible for burying Polynises. If the guard does not find who is responsible with in a certain amount of time, the guard will suffer the consequences of a slow, painful death in place of the person who buried Polynises.
"I think I'll.."
In "Antigone", when King Creon, who had commanded that the body of Polyneices not be buried and left outside to rot, learned that someone had disobeyed orders and buried him. He immediately commanded the guard who brought him the news to bring him the person responsible.
bcuh creon loves the power that he has he likes bein entitled to things like this
Yes, Creon is responsible for at least three deaths in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon sentences his niece, Princess Antigone, to death by live burial and starvation. He hopes that she will kill herself long before she naturally gasps her last breath. He gets his wish when Antigone hangs herself. But the suicides of Prince Haemon, Antigone's betrothed and Creon's son, and of Queen Eurydice, Haemon's mother and Creon's wife, follow in quick succession. Creon causes all of the deaths to happen through his first cruel sentencing of a young girl who chooses the gods over him.
Creon. He ordered her death, but Antigone refused to be buried alive, and therefore killed herself by hanging.
In Oedipus Rex, Teiresias was the one who found out Oedipus's secret of him being the actual killer of his father, and him actually marrying his mother, so in a way, Teresias is responsible for giving Creon his position in ruling, which is why Creon is in debt to Teresias as he said in Antigone, Scene 5.
Oedipus believed that Creon and Teiresias were trying to frame him for the purpose of taking the throne. Oedipus the King was written by Sophocles.
That means "They think your sister is hot."