Creon Flaws

1008 Words3 Pages

In “Antigone” by Sophocles, the character Creon, who is the ruling king of Thebes, develops from a powerful king into a heartbroken widower. From the beginning of the play, the reader learns Creon has power “thanks to the gods” when the chorus sings from lines 179-184. However a characteristic not stated in Creon’s introduction, is the fact that he has a tragic flaw; thereby, making him a tragic hero. His stubbornness and obstinate views, cause turmoil in the play. Creon’s decision to prohibit the burial of Polynices, and to execute anyone who attempts to defy this order, leads the play into its series of unfortunate events. The root of the problem, his tragic flaw, withholds him from changing his mind despite several disagreeing views. Creon’s …show more content…

When he states that no one shall honor the death of Polynices, a domino effect plays throughout the story. Antigone’s role comes in as Creon’s antagonist when she says to Ismene, “Will you help these hands take up Polynices’ corpse and bury it?” (lines 54-56). Antigone’s first attempt to bury the body provokes Creon, which can be seen in line 286 when he exclaims, “What are you saying? What man would do this?” Not only does this line show his anger towards the defiant person who went against his orders, it also shows the readers of the 21st century the sexism that Creon holds and highlights the dramatic irony in the play, because the reader knows it was a woman-Antigone. Once finding out it is Antigone who defies his rules, Creon tries to coerce her to conform her views through a long dispute from lines 497-601. Creon even goes as far to point out that Antigone is “the only one who looks at things that way.” And “these views of yours—so different from the rest” (lines 575-576 and 580). Regardless of him pointing out these details, her views are left unchanged; she remains a static or unchanging character. Creon becomes irritated, and harshly punishes Antigone by sending her to an unavoidable death by locking her in a tomb. All this cruelty happens while the feelings of Haemon, Antigone’s romantic partner and Creon’s son, are over looked. This death sentence begins the doomed occurrences Creon …show more content…

This argument unintentionally influences Haemon to take his own life; he says, “Then she’ll die—and in her death kill someone else” (line 859). The reader can see the foreshadowing of his suicide in this line. During the argument, the reader also sees additional sexism from Creon in lines 852-853 where he exclaims, “You [Haemon] foul creature—you’re worse than any woman.” This is another example of the arrogant views Creon holds. In lines 879-880, the audience sees that Creon does not reverse his decision when he states, “Let him dream up or carry out great deeds beyond the power of man, he’ll not save these girls-their fate is sealed.” Creon ruthlessly acts against the pleas of his son at the end of the argument continuing his overbearing orders. Only after Teiresias informs Creon of his fate, which includes him inquiring that Creon will “lose a child of your [his] own lions, a corpse in payment for these corpses,” does he back down with his headstrong choice (lines 1194-1195). Although at this point it is too late in the play, the events of his destruction are already ensuing. Before he can release Antigone, he finds out that his son and his wife have been killed by their own hands due to his commands regarding

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