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Sophocles' ANTIGONE Complete

Translated by F. Storr. From the Loeb Library Edition, Originally published by Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA and William Heinemann Ltd, London. First published in 1912.

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Page 28

Creon: Not I, thy life is mine, and that's enough.

Antigone: Why dally then? To me no word of thine
Is pleasant: God forbid it e'er should please;
Nor am I more acceptable to thee.
And yet how otherwise had I achieved
A name so glorious as by burying
A brother? so my townsmen all would say,
Where they not gagged by terror, Manifold
A king's prerogatives, and not the least
That all his acts and all his words are law.

Creon: Of all these Thebans none so deems but thou.

Antigone: These think as I, but bate their breath to thee.

Creon: Hast thou no shame to differ from all these?

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Reference address : https://ellopos.net/elpenor/greek-texts/ancient-greece/sophocles/antigone.asp?pg=28