The way that William Butler Yeat's poem "From the Antigone" is parallel to Sophocle's Antigone is the speaker in the poem, as well as the chorus in the play, lament noble Antigon'e terrible fate. The poem only speaks about a woman who is dying. This woman is most likely Antigone. None of the other statements are mentioned in the poem. The correct answer is A.
Answer: C. He is in conflict with Ellen's family, and he resolves it by carrying Ellen away from her wedding.
The conflict that happens in Sir Walter Scott's poem is between Lochinvar and his lover's family, Ellen's. The conflict started when Ellen's father rejected Lochinvar when he asked for his daughter's hand in marriage.