That he likes his job, that he does not want to lose it, that he disdains the opinions of others, and that he can discourage future challenges and rebellions are the reasons why Creon is determined not to bury Polyneices in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).
Specifically, Theban King Creon has all the royal powers to himself and does not want that to change. He does not care what any one person or any one god thinks. He believes that denying burial rights to Thebans whom he considers disloyal will prevent future bloodshed and instability.
Chat with our AI personalities
Antigone risks death to bury her brother, Polyneices because she follows the laws of the Gods, not the law of what her uncle, King Creon makes.
Ismene doesn't wasnt her sister, Antigone, to bury POlyneices because she fears for her sister's life. Creon proclaimed that whomever might bury Polyneices would be publically stoned to death.
To go and bury Polyneices and free Antigone from the stone chamber.
Antigone feels that it is her duty to bury Polyneices because he is her brother, and it was a sacred duty to bury the dead so that they could pass the river that encircles the kingdom of death. She disobeyed Creon's proclamation, but followed the sacred laws.
Bury Polyneices and release Antigone is what the chorus thinks that Creon should do in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, the chorus cannot interact directly with any of the onstage characters. But its leader can do so. The chorus leader in fact asks Theban King Creon to bury the exposed body of Polyneices and to free Princess Antigone from her walled up cave.