In the Greek play Antigone by Sophocles, Creon, the King of Thebes, is a misanthrope. He trusts no one. He shows this through his actions towards Antigone when she wanted to give her brother, Polynices, a proper burial. Polynices is Creon’s nephew, but he was on Eteocles’s side when it came to choosing one of the two brothers. This whole time Antigone just wanted her brother to have a proper burial, but Creon got in the way of that, and decided that he was going to lock her in a dungeon for her to die of starvation.
Creon had a very strong opinion of not letting Polynices get a proper burial. Creon wouldn’t let anyone bury him, let alone Antigone. He had guards protecting his body until it was time to dump it. Creon didn’t believe Polynices deserved a burial, because he betrayed Thebes. Because of that he hated him and Antigone trying to steal the body to bury him made Creon go over the edge. “He is to be left unburied, left to be eaten by wolves and vultures, a horror for all to see.” (511). The people of Thebes didn’t always agree with the king. Many problems came from that all because Creon couldn’t bury his nephew. …show more content…
He had no qualms for ruining his son’s love life and killing his own niece. Antigone “robbed” her brothers body, so Creon had a reason to be angry with her, but Antigone still thinks that he is wrong for not letting Polynices have a proper burial. When antigone was admitting to everything Creon knew he was wrong, he was second guessing himself, so he tried to feel better by making Antigone think he was right. “Weeping and wailing at the door of death! There’d be no end of it, if it had force to buy death off. Away with her at once.” (529). They put her in a cave, with little water and food. After all of that Antigone didn’t want Creon to feel the satisfaction of killing her, so she killed herself. When Haemon saw her dead, he leaned on his sword and killed himself so he could be with