Table of Contents
- 1 What is an example of a metaphor in Antigone?
- 2 What metaphors does haemon use to convince his father to change his mind?
- 3 What is Haemon saying in his tree and sailing metaphors?
- 4 What is metaphor and its examples?
- 5 How did Antigone use Creon as a metaphor?
- 6 What does Antigone mean by ” come on, Cook “?
What is an example of a metaphor in Antigone?
Sophocles, the author, uses several metaphors to illustrate fate to those who refuse to change their minds. For instance, “the inflexible heart breaks first”, means that people who have a hard heart and refuse to consider others are the first to have their hearts broken.
What is a metaphor in Antigone?
As he tells Antigone, conjuring the storm-tossed ship as an extended metaphor for the beleaguered Thebes, the ship of state demands that all on board lose their names. Only the ship and the storm remain. To save the ship, Creon has had to terrorize the mob into obedience.
What metaphors does haemon use to convince his father to change his mind?
Haemon compares Creon to a tree that doesn’t bend and gets torn up for being stubborn, and he also uses a metaphor on sailing. In a nutshell, he saying that stubborness will only lead to him breaking at one point. What is hamartia?
What were Antigone’s last words?
Antigone’s last words are “O look upon me, / The last of a line of kings! / How savagely impious men use me, / For keeping a law that is holy.” Antigone is sentenced to death for disobeying Creon’s orders and burying Polynices. She is to be entombed and left to starve, and she utters these words on the way to the tomb.
What is Haemon saying in his tree and sailing metaphors?
Haemon tries to convince Creon that he is being too stubborn by using two metaphors: trees in a winter storm and a man sailing a ship. By using the tree metaphor, Haemon is suggesting that Creon’s stubbornness will cause his own downfall, much like the trees that “break” because they cannot “bend.”
How do you quote Antigone?
Always use parenthetical citation. For references to Antigone, put abbreviated name of play (Ant.) in parentheses with page number. For references to Inherit the Wind, use authors’ names and page number in parentheses (Lawrence and Lee 25).
What is metaphor and its examples?
A metaphor is a figure of speech that makes a comparison between two unlike things. In this metaphor, Juliet is compared to the sun. In fact, this figure of speech claims that Juliet is the sun. Of course, the reader understands that Romeo does not believe that Juliet is literally the sun.
What are the most important quotes from Antigone?
/ Your marriage strikes me from the grave to murder mine / I have been a stranger here in my own land / All my life / The blasphemy of my birth has followed me. Chorus: Your death is the doing of your own conscious hand. Analysis: Antigone brings up that whole Oedipus killing his father and marrying his mother incident.
How did Antigone use Creon as a metaphor?
Although Creon is not a cook, it is a metaphor used to compare his job of a ruler and king to a someone who creates (or cooks up) false rumors in the “kitchen of politics”. It is Antigone’s way of discrediting Creon, to represent him as a liar.
How are similes used in the book Antigone?
When the guards caught Antigone, they compared her actions of burying her brother to a hyena – a wild animal. This simile connotes to how crazy and absurd her actions were, and how uncivilized and wild she acted. It indicates how determined she was to obtain her goal, which characterizes who Antigone is, she is stubborn and is her mind is set.
What does Antigone mean by ” come on, Cook “?
“Come on, cook!” During the peak of tension between Antigone and Creon, Antigone calls Creon a cook. Although Creon is not a cook, it is a metaphor used to compare his job of a ruler and king to a someone who creates (or cooks up) false rumors in the “kitchen of politics”.