Question about Antigone

AgaBoogaBoo

Lifer
Feb 16, 2003
26,108
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Reading the play Antigone and here is a small clip for Scene 2:

Creon. Yours certainly did, when you assumed guilt with the guilty!
Ismene. But how could I go on living without her?
Creon. You are. She is already dead.
Ismene. But your own son's bride!
Creon. There are places enough for him to push his plow. I want no wicked woman for my sons!

Push his plow? Is it the perverted comparison I think it is?
 

WinkOsmosis

Banned
Sep 18, 2002
13,990
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It's not perverted. The Greeks considered sex to be sewing of a seed. The man was given full credit for baby making, with the woman just being a vessel.
 

DaveSimmons

Elite Member
Aug 12, 2001
40,730
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Originally posted by: WinkOsmosis
It's not perverted. The Greeks considered sex to be sewing of a seed. The man was given full credit for baby making, with the woman just being a vessel.
With a really big needle ;)

FYI that's "sowing" seed, also in "sow your wild oats," "reap what you sow" etc. :)

The literal definition (stolen from Google) "place (seeds) in or on the ground for future growth; 'She sowed sunflower seeds'"