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Oedipus 4

"An idea is an eye given by God for the seeing of God. Some of these eyes we can not bear to look out of, we blind them as quickly as possible." (Russell Hoban, American novelist) Sometimes the reality of a situation is so harsh that, instead of facing it, people blind themselves to it. In Oedipus Rex, the theme of sightlessness is prevalent throughout the play. Sophocles uses ambiguity to keep from creating biases toward the characters so that, in a sense the audience, as well as the characters, are blind. Fate and blindness go hand in hand in the play. The main character, Oedipus, is a severe victim of fate, ".... damned in his birth, in his marriage damned, damned in the blood he shed with his own hand." The hero Oedipus is tormented by the punishment of a crime that he did not commit. At birth, it was said that he would "...lie with [his] mother, breed children from whom all men would turn their eyes; and that [he] should be [his] father's murderer." This fate is undeserved and makes one question the reasoning behind the fate. The gods seem heartless and cold in their treatment to an innocent man.

The aspect of sightlessness is first mentioned in the discussion between a soothsayer and Oedipus to find out the just


Oedipus meets with a blind soothsayer to discuss the reasons for the country's drought and suffering. It is ironic that the only person who can see the truth is the blind man. In the meeting, Teiresias is reluctant to tell what he knows to the king because the man he is looking for is none other than himself. After being thoroughly tormented by Oedipus, the soothe sayer says to him, "I say that you, with both your eyes, are blind: You cannot see the wretchedness of your life." Instead of heeding Teiresias' words, Oedipus becomes infuriated at him. He refuses to even begin to believe that he is at fault. Oedipus still believes that his father lives in Corinth, and therefore thinks that it would be impossible for Teiresias's prophesy to be true.

In the end, Oedipus' wife and mother hung and he, "...plunged down [the brooches] straight into his own eyeballs." The punishment he gave himself was that he would never again be allowed to see the world which he brought so much shame upon. The prophesy had been fulfilled and fate took its course. However unfair fate is, one cannot argue with it, because it cannot and will not be changed.

ification for the punishing, "...murdering sea," that Thebes has been thrown upon. The city is being punished by the gods for an offense that has been committed by a criminal who does not know his crime. The question of justice arises and is dismissed just as fast because, "...justice is a concept. Muscle is the reality." The action of the gods may not have seemed fair, but, to coin a phrase, "life isn't fair." From his birth, Oedipus was prophesied to a fate worse than death, so his parents then sentenced him to death. He was bound at the ankles and carried off by a shepherd to be killed. The shepherd then felt pity for the baby

Some common words found in the essay are:
Corinth Oedipus, Oedipus Rex, Hoban American, , kill father, child messenger, parents corinth,
Approximate Word count = 1205
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)


  

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