Saturday, November 30, 2019
Oedipus Rex By Sophocles I (c. 496 - 406 B.C.) Essays -
  Oedipus Rex by Sophocles I (c. 496 - 406 B.C.)    Oedipus Rex  by Sophocles I (c. 496  - 406 B.C.)    Type of Work:    Tragic, poetic Greek drama    Setting    Thebes, a city of ancient Greece    Principal Characters    Oedipus, King of Thebes    Jocasta, his mother ... and finally his  wife    Teiresias, a blind prophet    Creon, Oedipus' brother-in-law    A Chorus    Play Overveiw  [The original 5th-century B.C. Greek audience  was assumed to be familiar with the background of the play.] Laius and    Jocasta were King and Queen of the Great City of Thebes. But it had been  prophesied that their son would grow up to kill Laius, his own father,  and then marry Jocasta, his own mother. Fearing the divination's fulfillment,    Laius and Jocasta delivered Oedipus, their infant son, to a servant, with  orders that he be killed. The servant bore the babe into the wilderness,  but couldn't bring himself to carry out the command. Instead, he turned  the child over to a Corinthian herdsman, who in turn passed the little  boy on to Polybus, King of Corinth - who adopted him as his own. Oedipus  was thus raised to believe that he was the natural son of Polybus.    But Oedipus' life began to unravel the  day he overheard an oracle repeat to him the unthinkable prophecy: he would  someday kill his father and marry his mother. Supposing that Polybus was  his real father, Oedipus determined to leave Corinth so as not to remain  anywhere near Polybus. In his travels, Oedipus came to a place where three  roads converged. There he became caught up in a violent argument with a  band of travelers. He managed to kill all but one of his attackers, but  remained oblivious to the tragic irony of this triumph: among the men he  had slain was Laius, his true father.    Later, the oracular prophecies completed  their awful and ironic cycle of fulfil lm,nt when Oedipus undertook a mission  to save Thebes, still acknowledged as his native city, from the predations  of a dire female monster, the Sphinx. Of all the unlucky heroes to make  the attempt, Oedipus alone was able to answer the riddle that was posed  mockingly to all travelers along the Theban roadside by the winged lion-woman:    "What goes first on four legs, then on two, and then on three?" The Sphynx  had ravenously devoured all those brave and foolhardy souls who regaled  her with exotic answers; but Oedipus, with the simple rejoinder "Man,"  gained the power to final] destroy her. The grateful populace of the city  quickly acclaimed him as King, and in time, he met, fell in love with,  and married his own mother, Jocasta. Of course Jocasta had no idea that  her new young husband was the son she had sent off to be killed as an infant;  nor did Oedipus realize that the loathsome prophecy had now at last been  fulfilled.  [As the play begins, the story of how Oedipus  discovers his "crimes" unfolds.]    In Thebes, a dreadful plague had struck.    The citizens assembled to appeal to King Oedipus to curb the disease, and    Oedipus reassured them that Creon, Jocasta's brother, had gone to Delphi  to ask the great Apollo how the plague might be ended.    When Creon finally returned, he brought  startling news: Apollo had declared that the scourge had come upon the  city because the very man who had murdered King Laius years before was  now a resident of Thebes. Apollo further swore that the plague would endure  until the murderer was exposed and exiled from the city.    Oedipus, wholly unaware that he himself  was the one who had struck down Laius, vowed to discover the identity of  the murderer at all costs:  ... Now I reign, holding the power which  he had held before me, having the selfsame wife and marriage bed - and  if his seed had not met barren fortune, we should be linked by offspring  from one mother; but as it was, fate leapt upon his Head, [and I shall  search] to seize the hand which shed that blood.    Oedipus' first step was to call in Teiresias,  a blind soothsayer of renowned wisdom. When the King questioned Teiresias  as to the identity of Laius' murderer, the prophet first claimed that he  did know the man's name, but then hesitated: "I shall never reveal ...    I will not hurt you or me." Still Oedipus pressed, and Teiresias finally  relented. "You are the slayer whom you seek," he sadly disclosed; "And  dreaded foot shall drive you from this land. You who now see straight shall  then be blind."    Oedipus, furious at the suggestion of his  guilt, berated the prophet, who retorted by insisting that Oedipus was  yet blind to the truth    
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