Monday, March 30, 2020
Antigone Essays (546 words) - Death Customs, Operas, Antigone
  Antigone    And Oedipus  Antigone and Oedipus, written by Sophocles, are dramatic plays with a tragic  ending. The main theme for Antigone is that people sometimes have to learn the  hard way from their mistakes. This theme is expressed in the final four lines of  the play. They read, There is no happiness where there is no wisdom; No wisdom  but in submission to the gods. Big words are always punished, And proud men in  old age learn to be wise. These lines are an important part of the play. They  symbolize Creon's bad decisions he made, his defiance to the gods, the  punishment he went through because of his edict, and the wisdom he gained  because of all his mistakes. "There is no happiness where there is no  wisdom" demonstrates how Creon not using wisdom in his decision affected him.    By declaring that Polyneices could not have a proper burial, he went against the  gods and the other citizens of Thebes's beliefs. This was not a wise decision  on his part, and because of it he lost his wife, his son, and his happiness.    Creon also defied the laws of the gods. This is what is expressed in the line,    "No wisdom but in submission to the gods." In Antigone, the edict and  decisions that Creon made demonstrated that his law was more important then the  gods laws. His defiance of the laws eventually made him believe, by talking to    Teirisias, that something bad would happen to him, so he gave in to his  decision. When he gave into the gods he gained wisdom and learned that his  actions would be punished. Creons edict is considered his big words. In the  third line it says, "Big words are always punished." Creons edict was  punished by his loss of happiness. He proclaimed to his city that Polyneices may  not be buried, when he did this he was very proud and demanding about his  decision. He was determined not to change his mind for anything. These big words  that he proclaimed would bring his downfall. Because Creon locked Antigone up,  for burying Polyneices, she killed herself. Creon's son Haimon, who was  engaged to Antigone, also committed suicide upon seeing his beloved Antigone  dead. Also Creon's wife took her own life. If Creon hadn't gone against what was  right, by making his laws more important then the god's laws, and issuing his  edict, he would not have suffered the way he did. By getting involved in  stopping Polyneices burial by his edict he brought upon his own terrible  punishment. The last line, "Proud men in old age learn to be wise"  explains the main theme of Antigone. The proud man is Creon, the King of Thebes.    By all the mistakes he makes he learns to be wiser. As a ruler he was a very  proud man. He didn't seem to care about anything as long as his commands were  carried out. By losing his son and wife and probably the respect of many  citizens of Thebes he grew wiser. Creon's bad decisions he made, his defiance to  the gods, the punishment he went through because of his edict, and the wisdom he  gained because of all his mistakes, all contribute to the main theme of Antigone,  that people sometimes have to learn the hard from their mistakes. The  explication of the final four lines of the play really give a better  understanding of the theme that Sophocles was trying to get across to his  audience.    
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