Antigone chooses to bury her brother out of respect for the law of the gods even if it means disobeying her uncle, King Creon. "I am not afraid of the danger; if it means death, it will not be the worst of deaths "" death without honor (Sophocles, p. 193),"� Antigone will sacrifice anything to bury Polyneices because in her opinion, death without honor is worse than death. "It was not God's proclamation. That final Justice that rules the world below makes no such laws (Sophocles, p. 208),"� her justification for her deed is that the edicts of the gods outweigh the ones of the mortals. She states her reason for her actions and enunciates her beliefs that individual conscience precedes the state.
Burying Polyneices proves to be Antigone's destruction. Outraged with the dishonor for his kingdom and his decree, Creon chooses demise as Antigone's fate. "This death of mine is of no importance, but if I had left my brother lying in death unburied, I should have suffered. Now I do not (Sophocles, p. 208)."� Regardless of the fact that Antigone receives a death sentence, she is not remorseful. "There is no guilt in reverence for the dead (Sophocles, p. 210),"� Antigone argues against Creon stating that her punishment is not an ethical deed because she acted out of respect for the dead. Her death sentence is later changed to imprisonment in a stone vault. Antigone sees no way out of her tomb so she