“You forget yourself! You are speaking to your King…” –Sophocles 851/2. It is evident that because he has had the fortune of inheriting the Kingdom of Thebes, he deserves no bad luck. Thus, when Teiresias foresees the extreme misfortune, he doesn’t believe it. Simply because he is too prideful and decides to say they’ve paid Teiresias to speak foul of him. “…Go out of your heads entirely?...Intolerable! The gods favor this corpse? Why? How had he served them...Tried to loot their temples…Is it your senile opinion that the gods love to honor bad men…” Sophocles 822. Creon’s pride denies Polyneices a proper burial, despite the laws of the gods. He won’t let Polyneices be buried with the same honors as his brother, Eteocles, who was buried with all military honors. For Creon to go against the gods depicts his lack of respect for Greek religion. Therefore, his pride makes up over half of his tragic
“You forget yourself! You are speaking to your King…” –Sophocles 851/2. It is evident that because he has had the fortune of inheriting the Kingdom of Thebes, he deserves no bad luck. Thus, when Teiresias foresees the extreme misfortune, he doesn’t believe it. Simply because he is too prideful and decides to say they’ve paid Teiresias to speak foul of him. “…Go out of your heads entirely?...Intolerable! The gods favor this corpse? Why? How had he served them...Tried to loot their temples…Is it your senile opinion that the gods love to honor bad men…” Sophocles 822. Creon’s pride denies Polyneices a proper burial, despite the laws of the gods. He won’t let Polyneices be buried with the same honors as his brother, Eteocles, who was buried with all military honors. For Creon to go against the gods depicts his lack of respect for Greek religion. Therefore, his pride makes up over half of his tragic