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Tragic Hero Haemon Quotes

Decent Essays

Kennard Lim
Mrs. Gomez
Freshman English
16 September 2015
Tragic Hero Haemon

In the classical drama, Antigone, Haemon is a possible candidate for the title of a tragic hero. To understand how Haemon in the drama, Antigone, could be a tragic hero, one must know what a tragic hero is. Aristotle describe a tragic hero as having several traits, such as: being of noble birth, displaying a quality of a hero, being doomed by fate, be a symbol of hope and despair, and having the following characteristic: hamartia, hubris, peripeteia, anagnorisis, nemesis, and catharsis (glossary of these characteristic will be at the end). Another information that is needed to understand why Haemon is a tragic hero in Antigone is about the classical drama itself. Antigone is a classical greek drama written by Sophocles and follows the tragic tale of a noble family …show more content…

His pride and need for justice causes not only his status with his father, but also his eventual death. Sophocles, the author, makes Haemon pride most obvious when Haemon argue with his father, and his pain through the messenger’s words. The quote that most effectively support the idea that Haemon has pride was said by Haemon himself and is this: “What rule - when you trample over the rule of heaven?” (Sophocles 224) The quote that most effectively portrays the outcome of Haemon pride is said through the messenger’s voice, “Then, the wretched lad, convulsed with self-hatre and despair, convulsed with self hatred and despair, pressed against that sword and drove it home, halfway up the hilt into the side” (Sophocles 226). The first of the two quote showed Haemon pride and how far his pride took him, and the second quote showed what effect that pride had on Haemon. These two quote not only showed that Haemon has hamartia, but also hubris , excessive pride, and thus fulfills these two part of the

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