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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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THE THEBAN SAGA 399<br />

who had attacked his own city. To leave the dead unburied was an offense<br />

against the gods, for it was the religious duty of the relatives of the dead to give<br />

them a pious burial. Antigone, as the sister of both Eteocles and Polynices, owed<br />

such a burial to both brothers, even though she would be breaking Creon's edict<br />

by burying Polynices. Alone (for Ismene refused to join in her defiance) she gave<br />

him a symbolic burial by throwing three handfuls of dust over his corpse. For<br />

this Creon condemned her to be buried alive. Antigone expresses her defiance<br />

of Creon in words of unforgettable power (Sophocles, Antigone 441-455):<br />

¥ CREON:<br />

Do you admit that you did this or deny it?<br />

ANTIGONE: I admit it and I do not deny it.<br />

CREON: Did you know that this was forbidden by my decree?<br />

ANTIGONE: I knew it for it was clear to all.<br />

CREON: And yet you dared to break these laws?<br />

ANTIGONE: Yes, for it was not Zeus who gave me this decree, nor did Justice,<br />

the companion of the gods below, define such laws for human beings.<br />

Nor did I think that your decrees were so strong that you, a mortal man,<br />

could overrule the unwritten and unshaken laws of the gods.<br />

Antigone was right. Creon's order defied the law of the gods, and he was<br />

soon punished. His son Haemon attempted to save Antigone (to whom he was<br />

engaged to be married) and, finding she had hanged herself in her tomb, killed<br />

himself with his sword. Creon's wife, Eurydice, killed herself when she heard<br />

the news of her son's death. Warned by Tiresias, Creon himself relented too late.<br />

The Antigone of Sophocles, like his Oedipus Tyrannus, shows how human beings<br />

cannot ignore the demands of the gods. Antigone is a heroine who is willing<br />

to incur a lonely death rather than dishonor the gods by obeying the king's<br />

command. 10<br />

THE BURIAL OF THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES<br />

According to Euripides (in his tragedy The Suppliant Women) Adrastus and the<br />

mothers of the Seven went to Eleusis (in Attica) as suppliants. Helped by Aethra,<br />

mother of Theseus, they persuaded Theseus to attack Thebes and obtain an honorable<br />

burial for the dead Argives. Theseus returned victorious with the corpses<br />

of the heroes (other than Polynices, Amphiaraiis, and Adrastus himself), and<br />

conducted their funeral rites. Capaneus was granted a separate pyre, and his<br />

widow, Evadne, threw herself into its flames.<br />

THE EPIGONI, SONS OF<br />

THE SEVEN AGAINST THEBES<br />

ALCMAEON, SON OF AMPHIARAÙS<br />

Amphiaraiis had ordered his sons to attack Thebes and to punish their mother,<br />

Eriphyle, for her treachery in accepting the necklace of Harmonia from Poly-

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