And though Creon finally sees Antigone's point of view, it is really too late, and the loss of life ensues right on stage: in the end Haemon (Antigone's beloved), his mother, and Antigone herself, they all commit suicide. ...
The following was taken from a journal entry I wrote while riding a bus to Amsterdam during a bvacation/b in Europe last summer. Parenthetical notes in brackets were included for clarification and were not a part of the original text. b..../b [ bCreon/b, Antigone] I repeat that I am resigned to death's imminence, but that doesn't make the fulfillment of my life seem trivial. On the contrary it makes it all the more dire. And for better or for worse it is the pursuit of this ...
... though a French forename seemed appropriate for the surname given. Where the Boys Are is a coming-of-age comedy from 1960 about college students bvacationing/b in Fort Lauderdale, which did wonders for local tourism apparently. ... Medea wreaks revenge by killing Creusa and bCreon/b; and then her two sons by Jason. 21a SSE {Liverpool-to-Portsmouth dir.}. Hey! for once I can reliably predict the dir. required. Normally I have no clue what the answer will be, ...