Conflict In Antigone Essay

818 Words2 Pages

Joel Miles
Mrs. Mussatti
Advanced English 1
17 October 2017

Personal Conflict in Antigone (King Creon) When one examines the virtues and beliefs of the characters in Sophocles’ Oedipus Trilogy one thing immediately comes to mind - all of them are conflicted at some point in the play (and some at multiple points). Ismene is torn between wanting to help her sister and wanting to obey the decrees of Creon. Haemon is told by his father to avoid women - especially Antigone - but he is in love with her and ends up dying because of this conflict. Even the guard, who only has a minor part, does not know whether he should ever return to Creon and nearly does not. These conflicts drive the play throughout, and none of them ever more than the multiple …show more content…

He has also fought Haemon his son to the point of him following Antigone to the cave, where unbeknownst to Creon they will both die. What finally convinces Creon to free Antigone? The prophet Tiresias, who has a complex discussion (essentially argument) with the king for most of scene five. This conversation is at first Tiresias telling Creon about how the omens - or lack thereof - that he has seen prove that Polynices should be buried and Antigone released. Tiresias tells him that “This was a sign from heaven. My boy described it, seeing for me as I see for others”. The sign in question is that there were no signs, meaning that Creon had done something wrong - terribly wrong. As the discussion carries on, we learn that the people of Thebes are rising up against Creon and his city is crumbling, or so Tiresias says. Naturally, the arrogant king doesn’t believe Tiresias at first - in fact, he accuses him of prophesying doom for money. Tiresias finds Creon so hopeless that he leaves the king to “waste his anger on younger men”. The chorus eventually convinces Creon to release Antigone, but it ends up being far too late as Antigone has hung herself and Haemon is soon to follow in suicide when Creon reaches the

Open Document