Creon
Creon blames himself for Antigone's death. He also blames himself for his wife Eurydice death and his son Haemon's death as well .
That everyone else dies is what happens to Theban King Creon's family by the time that the play "Antigone" ends.Specifically, there are only three members left in Creon's family when the play begins: his wife Theban Queen Eurydice, his son and heir apparent Haemon, and himself. But Haemon kills himself because Creon sentences Antigone, his own niece and future daughter-in-law, to death. Then the Queen kills herself once she learns that the last of her four children is now dead. So Creon ends the play all alone since his family would rather commit suicide than spend one more minute in his presence.
Not in a literal way, no. He still is to blame for her suicide. Should he left Antigone be after her appropriate burial of her brother, she would never had chosen death as an escape that she would not be facing.
his punishment for her is for her to be stoned to death.
Creon
Creon blames himself for Antigone's death. He also blames himself for his wife Eurydice death and his son Haemon's death as well .
That everyone else dies is what happens to Theban King Creon's family by the time that the play "Antigone" ends.Specifically, there are only three members left in Creon's family when the play begins: his wife Theban Queen Eurydice, his son and heir apparent Haemon, and himself. But Haemon kills himself because Creon sentences Antigone, his own niece and future daughter-in-law, to death. Then the Queen kills herself once she learns that the last of her four children is now dead. So Creon ends the play all alone since his family would rather commit suicide than spend one more minute in his presence.
he watching his brother when he drowned as a young child
Yes and no, Theban King Creon does and doesn't show 'thanatos'. The noun 'thanatos' is Greek for 'death'. So no, Creon doesn't die a physical death within the confines of the play 'Antigone'. But yes, he does show a death wish and in essence begins a living death at the end of the play. He loses his family, his job, and his home. In fact, he says, '... let it appear, that fairest of fates for me, that brings my last day...'.
Not in a literal way, no. He still is to blame for her suicide. Should he left Antigone be after her appropriate burial of her brother, she would never had chosen death as an escape that she would not be facing.
Yes, family members can call. You must be able to verify account details though. And you will be required to send a death certificate as proof of death.
Devastated by his misdeeds is Creon's attitude in the fifth scene of "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Creon already experiences before his very eyes the horror of his only surviving child, Prince Haemon, try to kill him and then succeed in killing himself. He makes the trip back to the palace. There he receives the news of the suicide of his wife, Queen Eurydice. The messenger says that Eurydice's last words are of blame and curse as far as Creon is concerned. Creon speaks of looking forward to death because of the pain and suffering brought by him to his family and to all Thebes.
his punishment for her is for her to be stoned to death.
because the family had lost members and friends
1. They where members of the nsdap. 2. they all supported the holocaust 3. they are partly responsible for the death of millions
Because family will take it hard than non-family members. . Everybody whose anybody knows that!