ISMENE:
To me, Antigone, no word of friends
Has come, or glad or grievous, since we twain
Were reft of our two brethren in one day
By double fratricide; and since i' the night
Our Argive leaguers fled, no later news
Has reached me, to inspirit or deject.
The passage of the prologue that provides the background of Sophocle's play, "Antigone" is:
ISMENE: "To me, Antigone, no word of friends has come, or glad or grievous, since we twain were reft of our two brethren in one day by double fratricide; and since i' the night our Argive leaguers fled, no later news has reached me, to inspirit or deject."
Here, Ismene, Antigone's sister explain that both of her brothers, Eteocles and Polyneices, had killed each other, commiting fratricide, in a fight to decide who would be the next King of Thebes.