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Oedipus the King

Oedipus the King

 

 

Oedipus the King

A plague has stricken Thebes. The citizens gather outside the palace of their king, Oedipus, asking him to take action. Oedipus replies that he already sent his brother-in-law, Creon, to the Oracle at Delphi to learn how to help the city. Creon returns with a message from the Oracle: the plague will end when the murderer of Laius, former king of Thebes, is caught and expelled; the murderer is within the city. Oedipus questions Creon about the murder of Laius, who was killed by thieves on his way to consult an oracle. Only one of his fellow travelers escaped alive. Oedipus promises to solve the mystery of Laius's death, vowing to curse and drive out the murderer.
Oedipus sends for Tiresias, the blind prophet, and asks him what he knows about the murder. Tiresias responds cryptically, lamenting his ability to see the truth when the truth brings nothing but pain. At first he refuses to tell Oedipus what he knows. Oedipus curses and insults the old man, going so far as to accuse him of the murder. These taunts provoke Tiresias into revealing that Oedipus himself is the murderer. Oedipus naturally refuses to believe Tiresias's accusation. He accuses Creon and Tiresias of conspiring against his life, and charges Tiresias with insanity. He asks why Tiresias did nothing when Thebes suffered under a plague once before. At that time, a Sphinx held the city captive and refused to leave until someone answered her riddle. Oedipus brags that he alone was able to solve the puzzle. Tiresias defends his skills as a prophet, noting that Oedipus's parents found him trustworthy. At this mention of his parents, Oedipus, who grew up in the distant city of Corinth, asks how Tiresias knew his parents. But Tiresias answers enigmatically. Then, before leaving the stage, Tiresias puts forth one last riddle, saying that the murderer of Laius will turn out to be both father and brother to his own children, and the son of his own wife.
After Tiresias leaves, Oedipus threatens Creon with death or exile for conspiring with the prophet. Oedipus's wife, Jocasta (also the widow of King Laius), enters and asks why the men shout at one another. Oedipus explains to Jocasta that the prophet has charged him with Laius's murder, and Jocasta replies that all prophecies are false. As proof, she notes that the Delphic oracle once told Laius he would be murdered by his son, when in fact his son was cast out of Thebes as a baby, and Laius was murdered by a band of thieves. Her description of Laius's murder, however, sounds familiar to Oedipus, and he asks further questions. Jocasta tells him that Laius was killed at a three-way crossroads, just before Oedipus arrived in Thebes. Oedipus, stunned, tells his wife that he may be the one who murdered Laius. He tells Jocasta that, long ago, when he was the prince of Corinth, he overheard someone mention at a banquet that he was not really the son of the king and queen. He therefore traveled to the Oracle of Delphi, who did not answer him but did tell him he would murder his father and sleep with his mother. Hearing this, Oedipus fled his home, never to return. It was then, on the journey that would take him to Thebes, that Oedipus was confronted and harassed by a group of travelers, whom he killed in self-defense. This skirmish occurred at the very crossroads where Laius was killed.
Oedipus sends for the man who survived the attack, a shepherd, in the hope that he will not be identified as the murderer. Outside the palace, a messenger approaches Jocasta and tells her that he has come from Corinth to inform Oedipus that his father, Polybus, is dead, and that Corinth has asked Oedipus to come and rule there in his place. Jocasta rejoices, convinced that Polybus's death from natural causes has disproved the prophecy that Oedipus would murder his father. At Jocasta's summons, Oedipus comes outside, hears the news, and rejoices with her. He now feels much more inclined to agree with the queen in deeming prophecies worthless and viewing chance as the principle governing the world. But while Oedipus finds great comfort in the fact that one-half of the prophecy has been disproved, he still fears the other half—the half that claimed he would sleep with his mother.
The messenger remarks that Oedipus need not worry, because Polybus and his wife, Merope, are not Oedipus's biological parents. The messenger, a shepherd by profession, knows firsthand that Oedipus came to Corinth as an orphan. One day long ago, he was tending his sheep when another shepherd approached him carrying a baby, its ankles pinned together. The messenger took the baby to the royal family of Corinth, and they raised him as their own. That baby was Oedipus. Oedipus asks who the other shepherd was, and the messenger answers that he was a servant of Laius.
Oedipus asks that this shepherd be brought forth to testify, but Jocasta, beginning to suspect the truth, begs her husband not to seek more information. She runs back into the palace. The shepherd then enters. Oedipus interrogates him, asking who gave him the baby. The shepherd refuses to disclose anything, and Oedipus threatens him with torture. Finally, he answers that the child came from the house of Laius. Questioned further, he answers that the baby was in fact the child of Laius himself, and that it was Jocasta who gave him the infant, ordering him to kill it, as it had been prophesied that the child would kill his parents. But the shepherd pitied the child, and decided that the prophecy could be avoided just as well if the child were to grow up in a foreign city, far from his true parents. The shepherd therefore passed the boy on to the shepherd in Corinth.
Realizing who he is and who his parents are, Oedipus screams that he sees the truth and flees back into the palace. The shepherd and the messenger slowly exit the stage. A second messenger enters and describes scenes of suffering. Jocasta has hanged herself, and Oedipus, finding her dead, has pulled the pins from her robe and stabbed out his own eyes. Oedipus now emerges from the palace, bleeding and begging to be exiled. He asks Creon to send him away from Thebes and to look after his daughters, Antigone and Ismene. Creon, covetous of royal power, is all too happy to oblige.
Character List
Oedipus - The protagonist of Oedipus the King and Oedipus at Colonus. Oedipus becomes king of Thebes before the action of Oedipus the King begins. He is renowned for his intelligence and his ability to solve riddles—he saved the city of Thebes and was made its king by solving the riddle of the Sphinx, the supernatural being that had held the city captive. Yet Oedipus is stubbornly blind to the truth about himself. His name's literal meaning ("swollen foot") is the clue to his identity—he was taken from the house of Laius as a baby and left in the mountains with his feet bound together. On his way to Thebes, he killed his biological father, not knowing who he was, and proceeded to marry Jocasta, his biological mother.
Jocasta - Oedipus's wife and mother, and Creon's sister. Jocasta appears only in the final scenes of Oedipus the King. In her first words, she attempts to make peace between Oedipus and Creon, pleading with Oedipus not to banish Creon. She is comforting to her husband and calmly tries to urge him to reject Tiresias's terrifying prophecies as false. Jocasta solves the riddle of Oedipus's identity before Oedipus does, and she expresses her love for her son and husband in her desire to protect him from this knowledge.
Antigone - Child of Oedipus and Jocasta, and therefore both Oedipus's daughter and his sister. Antigone appears briefly at the end of Oedipus the King, when she says goodbye to her father as Creon prepares to banish Oedipus. She appears at greater length in Oedipus at Colonus, leading and caring for her old, blind father in his exile. But Antigone comes into her own in Antigone. As that play's protagonist, she demonstrates a courage and clarity of sight unparalleled by any other character in the three Theban plays. Whereas other characters—Oedipus, Creon, Polynices—are reluctant to acknowledge the consequences of their actions, Antigone is unabashed in her conviction that she has done right.
Creon - Oedipus's brother-in-law, Creon appears more than any other character in the three plays combined. In him more than anyone else we see the gradual rise and fall of one man's power. Early in Oedipus the King, Creon claims to have no desire for kingship. Yet, when he has the opportunity to grasp power at the end of that play, Creon seems quite eager. We learn in Oedipus at Colonus that he is willing to fight with his nephews for this power, and in Antigone Creon rules Thebes with a stubborn blindness that is similar to Oedipus's rule. But Creon never has our sympathy in the way Oedipus does, because he is bossy and bureaucratic, intent on asserting his own authority.
Polynices - Son of Oedipus, and thus also his brother. Polynices appears only very briefly in Oedipus at Colonus. He arrives at Colonus seeking his father's blessing in his battle with his brother, Eteocles, for power in Thebes. Polynices tries to point out the similarity between his own situation and that of Oedipus, but his words seem opportunistic rather than filial, a fact that Oedipus points out.
Tiresias - Tiresias, the blind soothsayer of Thebes, appears in both Oedipus the King and Antigone. In Oedipus the King, Tiresias tells Oedipus that he is the murderer he hunts, and Oedipus does not believe him. In Antigone, Tiresias tells Creon that Creon himself is bringing disaster upon Thebes, and Creon does not believe him. Yet, both Oedipus and Creon claim to trust Tiresias deeply. The literal blindness of the soothsayer points to the metaphorical blindness of those who refuse to believe the truth about themselves when they hear it spoken.
Haemon - Creon's son, who appears only in Antigone. Haemon is engaged to marry Antigone. Motivated by his love for her, he argues with Creon about the latter's decision to punish her.
Ismene - Oedipus's daughter Ismene appears at the end of Oedipus the King and to a limited extent in Oedipus at Colonus and Antigone. Ismene's minor part underscores her sister's grandeur and courage. Ismene fears helping Antigone bury Polynices but offers to die beside Antigone when Creon sentences her to die. Antigone, however, refuses to allow her sister to be martyred for something she did not have the courage to stand up for.
Theseus - The king of Athens in Oedipus at Colonus. A renowned and powerful warrior, Theseus takes pity on Oedipus and defends him against Creon. Theseus is the only one who knows the spot at which Oedipus descended to the underworld—a secret he promises Oedipus he will hold forever.
Chorus - Sometimes comically obtuse or fickle, sometimes perceptive, sometimes melodramatic, the Chorus reacts to the events onstage. The Chorus's reactions can be lessons in how the audience should interpret what it is seeing, or how it should not interpret what it is seeing.
Eurydice - Creon's wife.
Themes, Motifs, and Symbols Key Facts
The Willingness to Ignore the Truth - When Oedipus and Jocasta begin to get close to the truth about Laius's murder, in Oedipus the King, Oedipus fastens onto a detail in the hope of exonerating himself. Jocasta says that she was told that Laius was killed by "strangers," whereas Oedipus knows that he acted alone when he killed a man in similar circumstances. This is an extraordinary moment because it calls into question the entire truth-seeking process Oedipus believes himself to be undertaking. Both Oedipus and Jocasta act as though the servant's story, once spoken, is irrefutable history. Neither can face the possibility of what it would mean if the servant were wrong. This is perhaps why Jocasta feels she can tell Oedipus of the prophecy that her son would kill his father, and Oedipus can tell her about the similar prophecy given him by an oracle (867–875), and neither feels compelled to remark on the coincidence; or why Oedipus can hear the story of Jocasta binding her child's ankles (780–781) and not think of his own swollen feet. While the information in these speeches is largely intended to make the audience painfully aware of the tragic irony, it also emphasizes just how desperately Oedipus and Jocasta do not want to speak the obvious truth: they look at the circumstances and details of everyday life and pretend not to see them.
The Limits of Free Will - Prophecy is a central part of Oedipus the King. The play begins with Creon's return from the oracle at Delphi, where he has learned that the plague will be lifted if Thebes banishes the man who killed Laius. Tiresias prophesies the capture of one who is both father and brother to his own children. Oedipus tells Jocasta of a prophecy he heard as a youth, that he would kill his father and sleep with his mother, and Jocasta tells Oedipus of a similar prophecy given to Laius, that her son would grow up to kill his father. Oedipus and Jocasta debate the extent to which prophecies should be trusted at all, and when all of the prophecies come true, it appears that one of Sophocles' aims is to justify the powers of the gods and prophets, which had recently come under attack in fifth-century B.C. Athens.
Sophocles' audience would, of course, have known the story of Oedipus, which only increases the sense of complete inevitability about how the play would end. It is difficult to say how justly one can accuse Oedipus of being "blind" or foolish when he seems to have no choice about fulfilling the prophecy: he is sent away from Thebes as a baby and by a remarkable coincidence saved and raised as a prince in Corinth. Hearing that he is fated to kill his father, he flees Corinth and, by a still more remarkable coincidence, ends up back in Thebes, now king and husband in his actual father's place. Oedipus seems only to desire to flee his fate, but his fate continually catches up with him. Many people have tried to argue that Oedipus brings about his catastrophe because of a "tragic flaw," but nobody has managed to create a consensus about what Oedipus's flaw actually is. Perhaps his story is meant to show that error and disaster can happen to anyone, that human beings are relatively powerless before fate or the gods, and that a cautious humility is the best attitude toward life.

 

Motifs
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the text's major themes.
Suicide - Almost every character who dies in the three Theban plays does so at his or her own hand (or own will, as is the case in Oedipus at Colonus). Jocasta hangs herself in Oedipus the King and Antigone hangs herself in Antigone. Eurydice and Haemon stab themselves at the end of Antigone. Oedipus inflicts horrible violence on himself at the end of his first play, and willingly goes to his own mysterious death at the end of his second. Polynices and Eteocles die in battle with one another, and it could be argued that Polynices' death at least is self-inflicted in that he has heard his father's curse and knows that his cause is doomed. Incest motivates or indirectly brings about all of the deaths in these plays.
Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts.
Oedipus's Swollen Foot - Oedipus gets his name, as the Corinthian messenger tells us in Oedipus the King, from the fact that he was left in the mountains with his ankles pinned together. Jocasta explains that Laius abandoned him in this state on a barren mountain shortly after he was born. The injury leaves Oedipus with a vivid scar for the rest of his life. Oedipus's injury symbolizes the way in which fate has marked him and set him apart. It also symbolizes the way his movements have been confined and constrained since birth, by Apollo's prophecy to Laius.
The Three-way Crossroads - In Oedipus the King, Jocasta says that Laius was slain at a place where three roads meet. This crossroads is referred to a number of times during the play, and it symbolizes the crucial moment, long before the events of the play, when Oedipus began to fulfill the dreadful prophecy that he would murder his father and marry his mother. A crossroads is a place where a choice has to be made, so crossroads usually symbolize moments where decisions will have important consequences but where different choices are still possible. In Oedipus the King, the crossroads is part of the distant past, dimly remembered, and Oedipus was not aware at the time that he was making a fateful decision. In this play, the crossroads symbolizes fate and the awesome power of prophecy rather than freedom and choice.
 
Full title - Antigone,Oedipus the King,Oedipus at Colonus
Author - Sophocles
Type of work - Play
Genre - Antigone and Oedipus the King are tragedies; Oedipus at Colonus is difficult to classify
Language - Ancient Greek
Time and place written - Antigone is believed to have been written around 441 B.C., Oedipus the King around 430 B.C., and Oedipus at Colonus sometime near the end of Sophocles' life in 406–5 B.C.; the plays were all written and produced in Athens, Greece
Date of first publication - The plays probably circulated in manuscript in fifth-century B.C. Athens and have come down to modern editors through the scribal and editorial efforts of scholars in ancient Greece, ancient Alexandria, and medieval Europe
Publisher - There is no known publisher of original or early editions. The most important modern edition of the Greek texts, prepared by A. C. Pearson, was published by Oxford University Press in 1924 and reprinted with corrections in 1928.
Tone - Tragic
Tense - Present
Setting (time) - All three plays are set in the mythical past of ancient Greece
Setting (place) - Antigone and Oedipus the King are set in Thebes, Oedipus at Colonus at Colonus (near Athens)
Protagonist - Oedipus is the protagonist of both Oedipus the King and Oedipus at Colonus. Antigone is the protagonist of Antigone.
Major conflict - Antigone's major conflict is between Creon and Antigone. Creon has declared that the body of Polynices may not be given a proper burial because he led the forces that invaded Thebes, but Antigone wishes to give her brother a proper burial nevertheless. The major conflict of Oedipus the King arises when Tiresias tells Oedipus that Oedipus is responsible for the plague, and Oedipus refuses to believe him. The major conflict of Oedipus at Colonus is between Oedipus and Creon. Creon has been told by the oracle that only Oedipus's return can bring an end to the civil strife in Thebes—Oedipus's two sons, Eteocles and Polynices, are at war over the throne. Oedipus, furious at Thebes for exiling him, has no desire to return.
Rising action - The rising action of Oedipus the King occurs when Creon returns from the oracle with the news that the plague in Thebes will end when the murderer of Laius, the king before Oedipus, is discovered and driven out. The rising action of Oedipus at Colonus occurs when Creon demands that Oedipus return to Thebes and tries to force him to do so. The rising action of Antigone is Antigone's decision to defy Creon's orders and bury her brother.
Climax - The climax of Oedipus the King occurs when Oedipus learns, quite contrary to his expectations, that he is the man responsible for the plague that has stricken Thebes—he is the man who killed his father and slept with his mother. The climax of Oedipus at Colonus happens when we hear of Oedipus's death. The climax of Antigone is when Creon, too late to avert tragedy, decides to pardon Antigone for defying his orders and burying her brother.
Falling action - In Oedipus the King, the consequences of Oedipus's learning of his identity as the man who killed his father and slept with his mother are the falling action. This discovery drives Jocasta to hang herself, Oedipus to poke out his own eyes, and Creon to banish Oedipus from Thebes. The falling action of Oedipus at Colonus is Oedipus's curse of Polynices. The curse is followed by the onset of a storm, which Oedipus recognizes as a signal of his imminent death. The falling action of Antigone occurs after Creon decides to free Antigone from her tomblike prison. Creon arrives too late and finds that Antigone has hanged herself. Haemon, Antigone's fiancé, attempts to kill Creon but ends up killing himself. Creon's wife, Eurydice, stabs herself.
Themes - The power of unwritten law, the willingness to ignore the truth, the limits of free will
Motifs - Suicide, sight and blindness, graves and tombs
Symbols - Oedipus's swollen foot, the three-way crossroads, Antigone's entombment
Foreshadowing - Oedipus's name, which literally means "swollen foot," foreshadows his discovery of his own identity. Tiresias, the blind prophet, appears in both Oedipus the King and Antigone and announces what will happen to Oedipus and to Creon—only to be completely ignored by both. The truth that comes from Tiresias's blindness foreshadows the revelation that inspires Oedipus to blind himself. Oedipus's command in Oedipus at Colonus that no one, not even his own daughters, know where he has been buried foreshadows the problems surrounding burial in Antigone.

Summary  LINES 1-337
Oedipus steps out of the royal palace of Thebes and is greeted by a procession of priests, who are in turn surrounded by the impoverished and sorrowful citizens of Thebes. The citizens carry branches wrapped in wool, which they offer to the gods as gifts. Thebes has been struck by a plague, the citizens are dying, and no one knows how to put an end to it. Oedipus asks a priest why the citizens have gathered around the palace. The priest responds that the city is dying and asks the king to save Thebes. Oedipus replies that he sees and understands the terrible fate of Thebes, and that no one is more sorrowful than he. He has sent Creon, his brother-in-law and fellow ruler, to the Delphic oracle to find out how to stop the plague. Just then, Creon arrives, and Oedipus asks what the oracle has said. Creon asks Oedipus if he wants to hear the news in private, but Oedipus insists that all the citizens hear. Creon then tells what he has learned from the god Apollo, who spoke through the oracle: the murderer of Laius, who ruled Thebes before Oedipus, is in Thebes. He must be driven out in order for the plague to end.
Creon goes on to tell the story of Laius's murder. On their way to consult an oracle, Laius and all but one of his fellow travelers were killed by thieves. Oedipus asks why the Thebans made no attempt to find the murderers, and Creon reminds him that Thebes was then more concerned with the curse of the Sphinx. Hearing this, Oedipus resolves to solve the mystery of Laius's murder.
The Chorus enters, calling on the gods Apollo, Athena, and Artemis to save Thebes. Apparently, it has not heard Creon's news about Laius's murderer. It bemoans the state of Thebes, and finally invokes Dionysus, whose mother was a Theban. Oedipus returns and tells the Chorus that he will end the plague himself. He asks if anyone knows who killed Laius, promising that the informant will be rewarded and the murderer will receive no harsher punishment than exile. No one responds, and Oedipus furiously curses Laius's murderer and anyone who is protecting him. Oedipus curses himself, proclaiming that should he discover the murderer to be a member of his own family, that person should be struck by the same exile and harsh treatment that he has just wished on the murderer. Oedipus castigates the citizens of Thebes for letting the murderer go unknown so long. The Leader of the Chorus suggests that Oedipus call for Tiresias, a great prophet, and Oedipus responds that he has already done so.
Analysis
Oedipus is notable for his compassion, his sense of justice, his swiftness of thought and action, and his candor. At this early stage in the play, Oedipus represents all that an Athenian audience—or indeed any audience—could desire in a citizen or a leader. In his first speech, which he delivers to an old priest whose suffering he seeks to alleviate, he continually voices his concern for the health and well-being of his people. He insists upon allowing all his people to hear what the oracle has said, despite Creon's suggestion that Oedipus hear the news in private. When Creon retells the story of Laius's murder, Oedipus is shocked and dismayed that the investigation of the murder of a king was so swiftly dropped (145–147). Oedipus quickly hatches plans to deal with both his people's suffering and Laius's unsolved murder, and he has even anticipated the Chorus's suggestions that he send someone to the oracle and call forth Tiresias. Finally, Oedipus is vehement in his promises of dire punishment for Laius's murderer, even if the murderer turns out to be someone close to Oedipus himself.
Sophocles' audience knew the ancient story of Oedipus well, and would therefore interpret the greatness Oedipus exudes in the first scene as a tragic harbinger of his fall. Sophocles seizes every opportunity to exploit this dramatic irony. Oedipus frequently alludes to sight and blindness, creating many moments of dramatic irony, since the audience knows that it is Oedipus's metaphorical blindness to the relationship between his past and his present situation that brings about his ruin. For example, when the old priest tells Oedipus that the people of Thebes are dying of the plague, Oedipus says that he could not fail to see this (68–72). Oedipus eagerly attempts to uncover the truth, acting decisively and scrupulously refusing to shield himself from the truth. Although we are able to see him as a mere puppet of fate, at some points, the irony is so magnified that it seems almost as if Oedipus brings catastrophe upon himself willingly. One such instance of this irony is when Oedipus proclaims proudly—but, for the audience, painfully—that he possesses the bed of the former king, and that marriage might have even created "blood-bonds" between him and Laius had Laius not been murdered (294–300).
Although the Chorus's first ode (168–244) piously calls to the gods to save Thebes from the plague, the answer they get to their prayer arrives in human form. Immediately following the ode, Oedipus enters and says that he will answer the Chorus's prayers. For a moment, Oedipus takes upon himself the role of a god—a role the Chorus has been both reluctant and eager to allow him (see 39–43). Oedipus is so competent in the affairs of men that he comes close to dismissing the gods, although he does not actually blaspheme, as Creon does in Antigone. At this early moment, we see Oedipus's dangerous pride, which explains his willful blindness and, to a certain extent, justifies his downfall.

Summary  LINES 338-706
A boy leads in the blind prophet Tiresias. Oedipus begs him to reveal who Laius's murderer is, but Tiresias answers only that he knows the truth but wishes he did not. Puzzled at first, then angry, Oedipus insists that Tiresias tell Thebes what he knows. Provoked by the anger and insults of Oedipus, Tiresias begins to hint at his knowledge. Finally, when Oedipus furiously accuses Tiresias of the murder, Tiresias tells Oedipus that Oedipus himself is the curse. Oedipus dares Tiresias to say it again, and so Tiresias calls Oedipus the murderer. The king criticizes Tiresias's powers wildly and insults his blindness, but Tiresias only responds that the insults will eventually be turned on Oedipus by all of Thebes. Driven into a fury by the accusation, Oedipus proceeds to concoct a story that Creon and Tiresias are conspiring to overthrow him.
The leader of the Chorus asks Oedipus to calm down, but Tiresias only taunts Oedipus further, saying that the king does not even know who his parents are. This statement both infuriates and intrigues Oedipus, who asks for the truth of his parentage. Tiresias answers only in riddles, saying that the murderer of Laius will turn out to be both brother and father to his children, both son and husband to his mother. The characters exit and the Chorus takes the stage, confused and unsure whom to believe. They resolve that they will not believe any of these accusations against Oedipus unless they are shown proof.
Creon enters, soon followed by Oedipus. Oedipus accuses Creon of trying to overthrow him, since it was he who recommended that Tiresias come. Creon asks Oedipus to be rational, but Oedipus says that he wants Creon murdered. Both Creon and the leader of the Chorus try to get Oedipus to understand that he's concocting fantasies, but Oedipus is resolute in his conclusions and his fury.
Analysis
As in Antigone, the entrance of Tiresias signals a crucial turning point in the plot. But in Oedipus the King, Tiresias also serves an additional role—his blindness augments the dramatic irony that governs the play. Tiresias is blind but can see the truth; Oedipus has his sight but cannot. Oedipus claims that he longs to know the truth; Tiresias says that seeing the truth only brings one pain. In addition to this unspoken irony, the conversation between Tiresias and Oedipus is filled with references to sight and eyes. As Oedipus grows angrier, he taunts Tiresias for his blindness, confusing physical sight and insight, or knowledge. Tiresias matches Oedipus insult for insult, mocking Oedipus for his eyesight and for the brilliance that once allowed him to solve the riddle of the Sphinx—neither quality is now helping Oedipus to see the truth.
In this section, the characteristic swiftness of Oedipus's thought, words, and action begins to work against him. When Tiresias arrives at line 340, Oedipus praises him as an all-powerful seer who has shielded Thebes from many a plague. Only forty lines later, he refers to Tiresias as "scum," and soon after that accuses him of treason. Oedipus sizes up a situation, makes a judgment, and acts—all in an instant. While this confident expedience was laudable in the first section, it is exaggerated to a point of near absurdity in the second. Oedipus asks Tiresias and Creon a great many questions—questions are his typical mode of address and frequently a sign of his quick and intelligent mind—but they are merely rhetorical, for they accuse and presume rather than seek answers. Though Tiresias has laid the truth out plainly before Oedipus, the only way Oedipus can interpret the prophet's words is as an attack, and his quest for information only seeks to confirm what he already believes.
The Chorus seems terrified and helpless in this section, and its speech at lines 526–572 is fraught with uncertainty and anxiety. Though, like Oedipus, the Chorus cannot believe the truth of what Tiresias has said, the Chorus does not believe itself to be untouchable as Oedipus does, consisting as it does of the plague-stricken, innocent citizens of Thebes. The Chorus's speech is full of images of caves, darkness, lightning, and wings, which suggest darkness, the unknown, and, most significantly, terror striking from the skies. The Chorus's supplications to the benevolent gods of lines 168–244 are long past. The gods are still present in this speech, but they are no longer of any help, because they know truths that they will not reveal. Thebes is menaced rather than protected by the heavens.
Summary  LINES 707-1007
Oedipus's wife, Jocasta, enters and convinces Oedipus that he should neither kill nor exile Creon, though the reluctant king remains convinced that Creon is guilty. Creon leaves, and the Chorus reassures Oedipus that it will always be loyal to him. Oedipus explains to Jocasta how Tiresias condemned him, and Jocasta responds that all prophets are false. As proof, she offers the fact that the Delphic oracle told Laius he would be murdered by his son, while actually his son was cast out of Thebes as a baby and Laius was murdered by a band of thieves. Her narrative of his murder, however, sounds familiar to Oedipus, and he asks to hear more.
Jocasta tells him that Laius was killed at a three-way crossroads, just before Oedipus arrived in Thebes. Oedipus, stunned, tells his wife that he may be the one who murdered Laius. He tells Jocasta that, long ago, when he was the prince of Corinth, he heard at a banquet that he was not really the son of the king and queen, and so went to the Oracle of Delphi, which did not answer him but did tell him he would murder his father and sleep with his mother. Hearing this, Oedipus fled from home, never to return. It was then, on the journey that would take him to Thebes, that Oedipus was confronted and harassed by a group of travelers, whom he killed in self-defense, at the very crossroads where Laius was killed.
Hoping that he will not be identified as Laius's murderer, Oedipus sends for the shepherd who was the only man to survive the attack. Oedipus and Jocasta leave the stage, and the Chorus enters, announcing that the world is ruled by destiny and denouncing prideful men who would defy the gods. At the same time, the Chorus worries that if all the prophecies and oracles are wrong—if a proud man can, in fact, triumph—then the gods may not rule the world after all. Jocasta enters from the palace to offer a branch wrapped in wool to Apollo.
Analysis
Whatever sympathy we might have lost for Oedipus amid his ranting in the second section, we regain at least partially in the third. After Jocasta intercedes in the fight between Oedipus and Creon, Oedipus calms down and recalls that there is a riddle before him that he, as the ruler of Thebes, has a responsibility to solve. Consequently, his incessant questions become more purposeful than they were in his conversations with Tiresias and Creon. We see that Oedipus logically and earnestly pursues the truth when he does not have a preconceived idea of what the truth is. When Oedipus seizes upon the detail of the three-way crossroads (805–822), he proves that he was not merely grandstanding in the first scene of the play when he expressed his desire to be forthright with his citizens and to subject himself to the same laws he imposes upon others. In his speech at lines 848–923, Oedipus shows that he truly believes he killed Laius and is willing to accept not only the responsibility but the punishment for the act. The speech is heartbreaking because we know that Oedipus has arrived at only half the truth.
In this section, Jocasta is both careless and maternal. She tells Oedipus that prophecies do not come true, and she uses the fact that an oracle incorrectly prophesied that Laius would be killed by his own son as evidence. Jocasta's mistake is similar to Oedipus's in the previous section: she confuses conclusions and evidence. As Oedipus assumed that Tiresias's unpleasant claims could only be treason, so Jocasta assumes that because one prophecy has apparently not come to pass, prophecies can only be lies. While Oedipus's hasty and imperfect logic in the second section has much to do with his pride, Jocasta's in this section seem attached to an unwitting desire to soothe and mother Oedipus. When Jocasta is not answering Oedipus's questions, she is calming him down, asking him to go into the palace, telling him that he has nothing to worry about—no need to ask more questions—for the rest of his life. Jocasta's casual attitude upsets the Chorus, which continues to be loyal to Oedipus throughout this section (see 761–767). The Chorus's ode at lines 954–997 serves as a reminder that neither Oedipus, Jocasta, nor the sympathetic audience should feel calm, because oracles speak to a purpose and are inspired by the gods who control the destiny of men. Throughout the play, the Chorus has been miserable, desperate for the plague to end and for stability to be restored to the city. Nevertheless, the Chorus holds staunchly to the belief that the prophesies of Tiresias will come true. For if they do not, there is no order on earth or in the heavens.


Summary  LINES 1008-1310

 


And as for this marriage with your mother—
have no fear. Many a man before you,
in his dreams, has shared his mother's bed.
Take such things for shadows, nothing at all—
Live, Oedipus, as if there's no tomorrow!

 

A messenger enters, looking for Oedipus. He tells Jocasta that he has come from Corinth to tell Oedipus that his father, Polybus, is dead, and that Corinth wants Oedipus to come and rule there. Jocasta rejoices, convinced that since Polybus is dead from natural causes, the prophecy that Oedipus will murder his father is false. Oedipus arrives, hears the messenger's news, and rejoices with Jocasta; king and queen concur that prophecies are worthless and the world is ruled by chance. However, Oedipus still fears the part of the prophecy that said he would sleep with his mother. The messenger says he can rid himself of that worry, because Polybus and his wife, Merope, are not really Oedipus's natural parents.
The messenger explains that he used to be a shepherd years ago. One day, he found a baby on Mount Cithaeron, near Thebes. The baby had its ankles pinned together, and the former shepherd set them free. That baby was Oedipus, who still walks with a limp because of the injury to his ankles so long ago. When Oedipus inquires who left him in the woods on the mountain, the messenger replies that another shepherd, Laius's servant, gave him baby Oedipus. At this, Jocasta turns sharply, seeming to sense some horrible revelation on the horizon.
Oedipus wants to find this shepherd, so he can find out who his natural parents are. Jocasta begs him to abandon his search immediately, but Oedipus is insistent. After screaming and pleading some more to no avail, Jocasta finally flees back into the palace. Oedipus dismisses her concerns as snobbish fears that he may be born of poor parents, and Oedipus and the Chorus rejoice at the possibility that they may soon know who his parents truly are.
The other shepherd, who turns out to be the same shepherd who witnessed Laius's murder, comes onto the stage. The messenger identifies him as the man who gave him the young Oedipus. Oedipus interrogates the new arrival, asking who gave him the baby, but the shepherd refuses to talk. Finally, after Oedipus threatens him with torture, the shepherd answers that the baby came from the house of Laius. Questioned further, he answers that it was Laius's child, and that Jocasta gave it to him to destroy because of a prophecy that the child would kill his parents. But instead, the shepherd gave him to the other shepherd, so that he might be raised as a prince in Corinth. Realizing who he is and who his parents are, Oedipus screams that he sees the truth, and flees back into the palace. The shepherd and the messenger slowly exit the stage.
Analysis
Sophocles makes the scene in which Oedipus and Jocasta learn that Polybus is dead seem strangely comic. Oedipus digests the news of Polybus's death without showing the slightest sign of grief. The moment becomes, in fact, an occasion for near triumph, as Oedipus believes his doubts about prophecies have been confirmed. He is now convinced that prophecies are useless. He even says, "Polybus / packs [all the prophecies] off to sleep with him in hell!" (1062–1063). Oedipus's strange glee reveals the extent to which he has withdrawn into himself after obtaining the knowledge that he killed his father. He and Jocasta rejoice in the smallest and most bizarre details in order to alleviate some of the guilt Oedipus feels (for another example, see Oedipus and Jocasta's discussion at lines 938–951).
Oedipus's own tenacity, however, means that he will not allow his understanding to remain incomplete. When he learns that there is still a piece of the puzzle left unsolved—the identity of the man from whom the messenger received the baby Oedipus—Oedipus seems irresistibly driven to ask questions until the whole truth is out. Thus, he gradually deprives himself of ambiguous details that could alleviate his guilt. Jocasta, of course, solves the riddle before Oedipus—she realizes she is his mother while he is still imagining himself to be the child of slaves. Oedipus must realize that something is amiss when Jocasta leaves the stage screaming, but his speech at lines 1183–1194 is strangely joyful. Chance, he says in this speech, is his mother, and the waxing and waning moon his brothers. Overwhelmed by an onslaught of new information, Oedipus re-envisions his earthly relationships as celestial ones as he announces his intent to uncover his true identity. It seems that he is unable to face directly the reality of his origins—reconceiving his identity allows him to feel a sense of control over it, but it also keeps that identity ambiguous. He basically identifies himself as someone who must search for his identity. Oedipus, who is famous for his skill at solving riddles, thus makes his own life into a riddle.
The messenger and shepherd are both similar to and different from the messenger characters who enter at the end of Greek tragedies to announce the terrible events that have occurred offstage (as will happen at the end of Oedipus the King [lines 1365–1422]). Like the typical final-scene messenger, these characters bear important news that is largely concerned with events that have not happened onstage. But unlike the typical final-scene messenger, these characters bear news not only to the audience but also to the man whom the news directly affects.
Because Oedipus receives news of his own tragedy, his drastic actions near the play's conclusion become an exaggerated model of how the audience is expected to react to the words of the messenger characters, who narrate the catastrophes in the final scenes of Greek plays. Throughout the play, Oedipus has been concerned with precise words—of the oracle (102), of Jocasta when she mentions the three-way crossroads (805), of the messenger who escaped death in Laius's traveling party (932–937). After learning the truth of his origins, however, Oedipus gives words physical consequence. He transforms the messenger's statement into a tangible, life-changing, physical horror, in a manner that shows the audience what its reaction should be.

Summary  LINES 1311-1684
The Chorus enters and cries that even Oedipus, greatest of men, was brought low by destiny, for he unknowingly murdered his father and married his mother. The messenger enters again to tell the Chorus what has happened in the palace. Jocasta is dead, by suicide. She locked herself in her bedroom, crying for Laius and weeping for her monstrous fate. Oedipus came to the door in a fury, asking for a sword and cursing Jocasta. He finally hurled himself at the bedroom door and burst through it, where he saw Jocasta hanging from a noose. Seeing this, Oedipus sobbed and embraced Jocasta. He then took the gold pins that held her robes and, with them, stabbed out his eyes. He kept raking the pins down his eyes, crying that he could not bear to see the world now that he had learned the truth.
Just as the messenger finishes the story, Oedipus emerges from the palace. With blood streaming from his blind eyes, he fumes and rants at his fate, and at the infinite darkness that embraces him. He claims that though Apollo ordained his destiny, it was he alone who pierced his own eyes. He asks that he be banished from Thebes. The Chorus shrinks away from Oedipus as he curses his birth, his marriage, his life, and in turn all births, marriages, and lives.
Creon enters, and the Chorus expresses hope that he can restore order. Creon forgives Oedipus for his past accusations of treason and asks that Oedipus be sent inside so that the public display of shame might stop. Creon agrees to exile Oedipus from the city, but tells him that he will only do so if every detail is approved by the gods. Oedipus embraces the hope of exile, since he believes that, for some reason, the gods want to keep him alive. He says that his two sons are men and can take care of themselves, but asks that Creon take care of his girls, whom he would like to see one final time.
The girls, Antigone and Ismene, come forth, crying. Oedipus embraces them and says he weeps for them, since they will be excluded from society, and no man will want to marry the offspring of an incestuous marriage. He turns to Creon and asks him to promise that he will take care of them. He reaches out to Creon, but Creon will not touch his hand. Oedipus asks his daughters to pray that they may have a better life than his. Creon then puts an end to the farewell, saying that Oedipus has wept shamefully long enough. Creon orders the guards to take Antigone and Ismene away from Oedipus, and tells Oedipus that his power has ended. Everyone exists, and the Chorus comes onstage once more. Oedipus, greatest of men, has fallen, they say, and so all life is miserable, and only death can bring peace.
Analysis
The speech of the Chorus, with which this section begins (1311–1350), turns the images of the plowman and ship's captain, which formerly stood for Oedipus's success and ability to manage the state, into images of his failure. And the way in which it does so is quite extreme, focusing particularly on the sexual aspect of Oedipus's actions. Oedipus and his father have, like two ships in one port, shared the same "wide harbor," and Oedipus has plowed the same "furrows" his father plowed (1334–1339). The harbor image ostensibly refers to Jocasta's bedchamber, but both images also quite obviously refer to the other space Oedipus and his father have shared: Jocasta's vagina.
Images of earth and soil continue throughout the scene, most noticeably in one of Oedipus's final speeches, in which he talks to his children about what he has done (see 1621–1661). These images of earth, soil, and plowing are used to suggest the metaphor of the sturdy plowman tilling the soil of the state, but they also suggest the image of the soil drinking the blood of the family members Oedipus has killed (see in particular 1531–1537). Oedipus's crimes are presented as a kind of blight on the land, a plague—symbolized by the plague with which the play begins—that infects the earth on which Oedipus, his family, and his citizens stand, and in which all are buried as a result of Oedipus's violence.
After we have learned of Oedipus's self-inflicted blinding, Oedipus enters, led by a boy (1432). His entrance is a clear visual echo of the Tiresias's entrance at line 337. Oedipus has indeed become like the blind prophet whose words he scorned. He is unable to see physically, but he is now possessed of an insight, or an inner sight, that is all too piercing and revealing. Though the Chorus seems fascinated with the amount of physical pain Oedipus must be in after performing such an act, Oedipus makes no mention of physical pain. Like Tiresias, he has left the concerns of the physical world behind and can focus only on the psychological torment that accompanies contemplation of the truth.
Once the mystery of Laius's murder has been solved, Creon quickly transfers the power to himself. Even in his newfound humbleness, Oedipus still clings to some trappings of leadership, the most pathetic example being his command to Creon to bury Jocasta as he sees fit. Oedipus finds it difficult to leave the role of commander, which is why he tries to preempt Creon's power by asking Creon to banish him. Creon, however, knows that Oedipus no longer has any real control. Creon is brusque and just as efficient a leader as Oedipus was at the beginning of the play. Just as Oedipus anticipated the Chorus's demand for a consultation with the oracle in the first scene, so Creon has anticipated Oedipus's request for banishment now: when Oedipus requests banishment, Creon says that he's already consulted "the god" about it (1574). Creon has also anticipated Oedipus's desire to see his daughters, and has them brought onstage and taken away again.
Mostly because he is contrasted with Creon, Oedipus becomes a tragic figure rather than a monster in the play's final moments. Though throughout the play Oedipus has behaved willfully and proudly, he has also been earnest and forthright in all of his actions. We trust Oedipus's judgment because he always seems to mean what he says and to try to do what he believes is right. His punishment of blindness and exile seems just, therefore, because he inflicted it upon himself. Creon, on the other hand, has the outward trappings of Oedipus's candid, frank nature, but none of its substance. "I try to say what I mean; it's my habit," Creon tells Oedipus in the play's final lines, but the audience perceives this to be untrue (1671). Creon's earlier protestations that he lacked the desire for power are proved completely false by his eagerness to take Oedipus's place as king, and by the cutting ferocity with which he silences Oedipus at the end of the play. At the end of the play, one kind of pride has merely replaced another, and all men, as the Chorus goes on to say, are destined to be miserable.

Important Quotations Explained

  • Fear? What should a man fear? It's all chance, chance rules our lives. Not a man on earth can see a day ahead, groping through the dark. Better to live at random, best we can. And as for this marriage with your mother—have no fear. Many a man before you, in his dreams, has shared his mother's bed. Take such things for shadows, nothing at all— Live, Oedipus, as if there's no tomorrow! (Oedipus the King, 1068–1078)

Explanation for Quotation 1
The audience, familiar with the Oedipus story, almost does not want to listen to these self-assured lines, spoken by Jocasta, wherein she treats incest with a startling lightness that will come back to haunt her. What makes these lines tragic is that Jocasta has no reason to know that what she says is foolish, ironic, or, simply, wrong. The audience's sense of the work of "fate" in this play has almost entirely to do with the fact that the Oedipus story was an ancient myth even in fifth-century B.C. Athens. The audience's position is thus most like that of Tiresias—full of the knowledge that continues to bring it, and others, pain.
At the same time, it is important to note that at least part of the irony of the passage does depend on the play, and the audience, faulting Jocasta for her blindness. Her claim that "chance rules our lives" and that Oedipus should live "as if there's no tomorrow" seems to fly in the face of the beliefs of more or less everyone in the play, including Jocasta herself. Oedipus would not have sent Creon to the oracle if he believed events were determined randomly. Nor would he have fled Corinth after hearing the prophecy of the oracle that he would kill his father and sleep with his mother; nor would Jocasta have bound her baby's ankles and abandoned him in the mountains. Again and again this play, and the other Theban plays, return to the fact that prophecies do come true and that the words of the gods must be obeyed. What we see in Jocasta is a willingness to believe oracles only as it suits her: the oracle prophesied that her son would kill Laius and so she abandoned her son in the mountains; when Laius was not, as she thinks, killed by his son, she claims to find the words of the oracle worthless. Now she sees Oedipus heading for some potentially horrible revelation and seeks to curb his fear by claiming that everything a person does is random.

  • People of Thebes, my countrymen, look on Oedipus. He solved the famous riddle with his brilliance, he rose to power, a man beyond all power. Who could behold his greatness without envy? Now what a black sea of terror has overwhelmed him. Now as we keep our watch and wait the final day, count no man happy till he dies, free of pain at last. (Oedipus the King, 1678–1684)

Explanation for Quotation 2
These words, spoken by the Chorus, form the conclusion of Oedipus the King. That Oedipus "solved the famous riddle [of the Sphinx] with his brilliance" is an indisputable fact, as is the claim that he "rose to power," to an enviable greatness. In underscoring these facts, the Chorus seems to suggest a causal link between Oedipus's rise and his fall—that is, Oedipus fell because he rose too high, because in his pride he inspired others to "envy." But the causal relationship is never actually established, and ultimately all the Chorus demonstrates is a progression of time: "he rose to power, a man beyond all power. / … / Now what a black sea of terror has overwhelmed him." These lines have a ring of hollow and terrifying truth to them, because the comfort an audience expects in a moral is absent (in essence, they say "Oedipus fell for this reason; now you know how not to fall").
Study Questions and Suggested Essay Topics

  • Examine the messenger's speech narrating the death of Jocasta and the blinding of Oedipus in Oedipus the King. What is the messenger's attitude toward the events he describes? What is the effect of his announcement on the audience?

Answer for Question 1
The audience does not see Jocasta commit suicide or Oedipus blind himself, because in Ancient Greek theater such violent catastrophes traditionally happen offstage. The audience hears them described by witnesses rather than seeing them firsthand. Greek tragedy left more to the imagination than modern theater does. It placed a great deal of importance on the language in which the catastrophe is described. In the case of Oedipus, the convention of keeping violence offstage is thematically appropriate. The audience is faced with the realization that it is blind, that it relies for its knowledge of events on report and hearsay, and is thus prone to error and uncertainty. Over the course of the play, the once-confident Oedipus discovers that he is in the grip of uncertainty and error himself. His self-blinding symbolizes, among other things, the blindness and doubtfulness of human life in general.
The messenger suggests that the Chorus—and, implicitly, the audience—is better off having been spared these terrible spectacles, and his words guide the audience's reaction. When the messenger describes the wrenching sobs that Oedipus delivers upon seeing Jocasta, our emotions are stirred in a different way than if we had simply witnessed the violence ourselves. The focus is on the other characters' reactions to the violent acts, and on the audience's reaction, instead of on the acts themselves.
Quiz
1. Which of the three Theban plays was probably written last?


(A)

Oedipus at Colonus

 (B)

No one knows

 (C)

Oedipus the King

 (D)

Antigone

2. How many children does Oedipus have?


(A)

2

 (B)

3

 (C)

4

 (D)

None

3. In Oedipus the King, whose murder must be avenged to end the plague in Thebes?


(A)

Creon's

(B)

Polybus's

 (C)

Laius's

 (D)

Polynices'

4. Which of Oedipus's children does not appear in Oedipus at Colonus?


(A)

Antigone

 (B)

Polynices

 (C)

Eteocles

 (D)

Ismene

5. What does the name "Oedipus" mean?


(A)

"Incest-monger"

 (B)

"King of Thebes"

 (C)

"Swollen foot"

 (D)

"Blinded by Fate"

6. Which of the three Theban plays was probably written first?


(A)

No one knows

 (B)

Oedipus the King

 (C)

Oedipus at Colonus

 (D)

Antigone

7. In what country was Oedipus raised?


(A)

Colonus

 (B)

Thebes

 (C)

Corinth

 (D)

Athens

8. In which play does Tiresias not appear?


(A)

Oedipus the King

 (B)

Antigone

 (C)

He appears in all three

 (D)

Oedipus at Colonus

9. What sentence does Creon impose upon Antigone for violating his edict prohibiting Polynices' burial?


(A)

She must be hanged

 (B)

Her eyes must be stabbed out

 (C)

She must be banished

 (D)

She must be buried alive

10. What is Creon's relationship to Jocasta?


(A)

Brother

 (B)

Father

 (C)

Son

 (D)

Uncle

11. What does Oedipus use to stab out his own eyes?


(A)

Knives

 (B)

Sticks

 (C)

The brooches from Jocasta's robe

 (D)

The horns of a sacrificial bull

12. From whose curse did Oedipus rescue Thebes?


(A)

The Sphinx's

 (B)

Laius's

 (C)

Apollo's

 (D)

Creon's

13. Who speaks last in each of the Theban plays?


(A)

Ismene

 (B)

Creon

 (C)

A messenger

 (D)

The Chorus

14. Whom was Antigone meant to marry?


(A)

Polynices

 (B)

Haemon

 (C)

Eteocles

 (D)

She was not meant to be married

15. Which god did Athenian theatrical performances celebrate?


(A)

Athena

 (B)

Zeus

 (C)

Dionysus

 (D)

Sophocles

16. Which of the following characters remains alive throughout the three Theban plays?


(A)

Oedipus

 (B)

Creon

 (C)

Antigone

 (D)

Jocasta

17. Where was Laius killed?


(A)

On a one-lane bridge

 (B)

Between a rock and a hard place

 (C)

In the mountains of Corinth

 (D)

At a three-way crossroads

18. In Oedipus at Colonus, how does Creon attempt to coerce Oedipus to return to Thebes?


(A)

He kidnaps his daughters

 (B)

He bribes Theseus

 (C)

He threatens war with Polynices

 (D)

He promises Oedipus new eyes

19. What does Oedipus prophecy about Polynices and Eteocles?


(A)

They will rule Thebes together

 (B)

They will die at each other's hands

 (C)

They will be betrayed by Creon

 (D)

They will sleep with their mother and kill their father

20. Who is the last remaining survivor of Oedipus's family?


(A)

Ismene

 (B)

Antigone

 (C)

Oedipus

 (D)

Eteocles

21. Which of the following deaths occurs onstage?


(A)

Oedipus's

 (B)

Jocasta's

 (C)

Antigone's

 (D)

None of these deaths occurs onstage

22. What does Creon do just before he finds Antigone dead?


(A)

Banishes Tiresias

 (B)

Argues with his wife, Eurydice

 (C)

Gives Polynices a proper burial

 (D)

Visits the oracle

23. What is the name of the character who helps Oedipus in Oedipus at Colonus?


(A)

Merope

 (B)

Polybus

 (C)

Theseus

 (D)

Cadmus

24. Which of the following characters does not commit suicide?


(A)

Antigone

 (B)

Ismene

 (C)

Haemon

 (D)

Eurydice

25. To whom do the woods belong where Oedipus at Colonus takes place?


(A)

Euripides

 (B)

The Eumenides

 (C)

Eteocles

 (D)

Theseus


 

Source: http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/Dr_Adli/

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Web site to visit: http://faculty.ksu.edu.sa/

Author of the text: indicated on the source document of the above text

NOTES AND STUDY QUESTIONS FOR OEDIPUS THE KING
(translated by David Grene, 1942)
See, as well, the Course Notes on Sophocles' Oedipus by John Porter.
NOTES FOR OEDIPUS THE KING
line 1 Cadmus: mythical founder of Thebes (see also the note at line 1533 of Oedipus at Colonus).
22 Pallas: = Athena, daughter of Zeus and goddess of wisdom.
22 Ismenus: a river near Thebes.
37 Sphinx: a monster with the head of a woman, the body of a lion and the talons of a bird; each day its riddle went unanswered it ate a Theban; Oedipus came, solved
the riddle, and was made king (the Sphinx is said to have self-destructed, in rage).
70 Apollo: son of Zeus; god of archery, light, prophecy, healing, and plague; often called Phoebus.
71 Pythian Temple: Delphi, the oracular centre of Greece; sacred to Apollo, who is often called the Pythian.
97 Phoebus: = Apollo.
151 God from the shrine of Pytho: = Apollo.
154 Delian healer: = Apollo.
160 Artemis: sister of Apollo.
177 the coast of the Western God: = Death.
186 the healing God: = Apollo.
187 golden daughter of Zeus: = Aphrodite, goddess of love.
190 War God: = Ares, son of Zeus.
195 palace of Amphitrite: = the ocean (Amphitrite was the wife of Oceanos).
205 Lycaean king: = Apollo.
211 Bacchic God: lines 209-214 all refer to Dionysos (also called Bacchus), the god of wine and ecstasy.
411 Loxias: = Apollo.
421 Cithaeron: a mountain near Thebes.
469 Pegasus: the winged horse, ridden by Bellerophon.
473 Parnassus: the mountain at Delphi.
483 the augur: = Teiresias.
491 Labdacus: father of Laius. Polybus: king of Corinth; reputed father of Oedipus.
868 Olympus: mountain which was the home of the gods.
898 navel of the earth: = Delphi.
899-900 Abae...Olympia: other oracular centres.
940 Isthmus: a reference to Corinth, kingdom of the reputed father of Oedipus.
994 Loxias: = Apollo.
1036 from this you're called your present name: "OED" = "swollen;" "PUS" = "foot" (cf. "octopus"); note that "OED" also means "see and/or know."
1227 Phasis...Ister: rivers near Thebes.

 

 

STUDY QUESTIONS FOR OEDIPUS THE KING

1. Divide the play into scenes, numbering them, and create a one sentence summary of each.
2. You are going to produce this play on a very low budget. What is the minimum number of actors, not counting the chorus, which you would be able to use?
3. What is the minimum amount of background information you need to understand the action of this play? (Note: All of it is in the play itself.)
4. What do lines 35-39 refer to? In other words, what was a Sphinx and how did Oedipus save the city from it? Looking at other references to the Sphinx in the play may help.
5. What is the "riddle of the Sphinx"? Why does Sophocles not tell us in the play? Does he make use of the riddle itself in any way?

**6. Do you see any irony in lines 149-150?
**7. Judging by the first scene only, is Oedipus a good king? For what reasons? Do the Thebans perhaps overrate Oedipus? Does he perhaps overrate himself?
**8. What ironical elements do you find in Oedipus' second speech?
**9. Can you find a mistake in the "theological logic" of the first choral interlude?
**10. What ironical elements do you find in Oedipus' proclamation following the first choral interlude?
**11. Twice within the first 300 lines of the play Oedipus shows that he has anticipated good advice which is given him. What are the two incidents and what is the effect of his anticipation?
**12. Who is "the man that is wise" at line 3l7?
**13. Collect the references to "eyes," "seeing," "learning," "understanding," "knowing," and "teaching" in the Teiresias scene. Is there any irony here? What about foreshadowing?
**14. Oedipus makes two false assumptions about the murder of Laius in the Teiresias scene. What are they? In terms of these two assumptions, what does the scene tell us about his character?
**15. In part of the interchange between Teiresias and Oedipus (350-368) the mystery of the play is clearly explained. Why does it take Oedipus some 700 lines to work it out?
**16. Does the short speech of the chorus at 404 forward suggest a kind of reversal of roles? What are its implications?
**17. Teiresias begins to speak in an oracular way at line 408. Explicate his riddles in terms of the revelations of the later parts of the play.
**18. Compare the first (151-215) and second (462-512) choral interludes. What feelings does each emphasize?
**19. What do you make of Oedipus' question at line 437?
**20. Is there any irony in the end of Oedipus' first speech to Creon (532 forward)?
**21. What do you make of Oedipus' lashing out at Creon? Is he being reasonable? What do you make of the two references to eyes at 528-531?
**22. Summarize the ideas in Creon's reply to Oedipus at 583-615. Do you agree with the chorus' assessment?
**23. Discuss the first Jocasta scene. What do you make of the relationship between her and Oedipus? What of the one between her and her brother?
**24. What new information do we get from Jocasta in her speech at 707-725? What new information does Oedipus get? Comment on his reaction.
**25. What new information do we get from Oedipus in lines 771-833? Comment on Jocasta's reaction.
**26. By line 784 both husband and wife have claimed that they have outwitted a specific oracle. What are the ironic implications?
**27. Bearing in mind the specific revelation Oedipus is reacting to in 821-834, do you see any irony?
**28. In her speech at 849-859 why do you suppose Jocasta mentions prophecies?
**29. At 874 some manuscripts read "tyranny breeds insolence" (the Greek word for "insolence" is "hybris"). Which reading do you think fits best?
**30. After her strong statement of disbelief in oracles at 849-859 what do you make of Jocasta's re-entry speech at 911-923?
**31. What news does the messenger from Corinth bring (up to line 963)? What are its implications? Is there anything disturbing in Jocasta's reaction at 945-949 and in
Oedipus' reaction at 964-973?
**32. In attempting to ingratiate himself, what new information about Oedipus' past does the messenger provide? What does Oedipus think the solution might be?
**33. At line 1033 Oedipus clearly indicates that he knows that there is something strange about his ankles. Does this fact shed any new light on question 24 above?

34. What sort of person is the messenger from Corinth?
35. "Lines 980-983 are the closest that any part of any version of the Oedipus Myth comes to the so-called 'Oedipus Complex' described by Freud." Discuss.

**36. Discuss the interchange between Oedipus and Jocasta at 1054-1073. What is the essence of the misunderstanding? What does this scene show you about the principles of the two characters?

37. How would you describe the interview between Oedipus and the herdsman?

**38. Read the second messenger's speech 1238-1285 aloud. What is lost by having the gore occur off stage? What is gained?
**39. Why doesn't Oedipus simply kill himself upon finding Jocasta dead? Would he not be, as the chorus put it, "better dead than blind and living"?
**40. Compare Creon's line at 1521 with the two lines preceding line 570. What is the effect of the ideas he expresses?
**41. What qualities does Creon reveal in his final scene?
**42. To what extent is it true that Oedipus' best qualities lead to his blindness? Is there a paradox here?
**43. Did Oedipus have a chance? Did he get a raw deal? Where did he go wrong?
**44. What are the major questions raised by the play? To what extent are they answered?

45. Which scene would be the most effective on stage? Which would be the least effective?

 

 

 

 

Consider that many of the events in the traditional story of Oedipus (killing his father, solving the riddle of the Sphinx, marrying his mother, etc.) have already occurred when the play opens. Why? Why does Sophocles concentrate on the life of Oedipus after his becoming king of Thebes?

How would you describe the character of Oedipus? What sort of a person is he? Consider how Oedipus sees himself (as seen for example in the play's opening speech and his later dialogues with Creon and Tiresias). What character traits and dispositions are dominant in his personality?

What is the effect of Oedipus's insistence and promises regarding the hunting down and punishing of the murderer of Laius? What does this suggest concerning his character as well as the meaning of Sophocles's play?

What may be the purpose and significance of the interactions between Oedipus and characters like Tiresias and Creon?

Why does Tiresias hesitate to tell Oedipus the truth of his identity?

What is the significance of Oedipus's slow coming into awareness of that identity?

What is the significance of the physical blindness of the prophet Tiresias? Is blindness an important and repeated symbolic motif in the play? How can we interpret Oedipus's act of self-blinding? Is his physical blindness symbolically similar to or different from that of Tiresias?

What do you make of the various situations at the end of the play (the suicide of Jocasta, Oedipus's self-blinding and exile, his prediction of a miserable life for his own children)? Why are the outcomes so tragic and extreme? What is the significance of the curse/prophecy that seems to haunt the family of Oedipus?

Is Oedipus an innocent victim of an unjust fate or does he bear some responsibility in the outcome of his life? Is his fate the result of unavoidable necessity or does he contribute to it through his own choices? Could he have changed the fate described in the prophecies? How?

Oedipus Rex
1. Why is Thebes suffering a plague?
2. What curse does Oedipus swear against the murderer of Laius?
3. Of what plot does Oedipus suspect Creon and Teiresias?
4. How does Jocasta try to reconcile Oedipus and Creon?
5. But what does she say which arouses Oedipus’ suspicions against himself?
6. What "good" and "bad" news does the messenger from Corinth bring?
7. What does the messenger say to reassure Oedipus, which causes Jocasta to leave?
8. What does Oedipus learn from the herdsman?
9. What punishment does Oedipus inflict upon himself?
10. Does Creon grant Oedipus’ wishes?

 

While students read (what you might need to know):
During the Prologue:
This part of the play was normally read by a lone
actor. Oedipus calls the citizens of Thebes 'the children of Cadmus'
because he was the mythical character who founded the city, after slaying
a dragon and sowing its teeth to make the first inhabitants. Apollo is
invoked because he was the god of healing and a plague has blighted the
city. Is Oedipus' pride evident from the very first lines? Note any references
to sight; it is used throughout the play as a metaphor for insight.

          Parodos:
At this point the Chorus would usually make their entrance.

          First Scene (lines 245 - 526):
This scene is filled with many instances of dramatic irony. For example,
when Oedipus condemns the murder which has brought about the plague
he is in fact condemning himself (the man who unknowingly killed his own
father and took his mother as his wife). Note particularly the character
Tiresias who clearly knows more than he's letting on. Is he trying to
protect Oedipus?

          First Stasimon (527 - 572) or closing of the scene:
The Chorus seems completely confused - are they following Tiresias or
Oedipus?

          Second Scene (573 - 953):
Is Creon being admirable here? Why should Oedipus have such a strange
reaction to Jocasta's account of her lost child? What is the significance of
her baby's ankles having been pinned? (Oedipus means 'swollen ankles' - a
major clue, but why doesn't he make the connection?).
The reference to the 'sacred dance' (line 895) refers to the god Bacchus
(aka Dionysus), god of wine, changing seasons and frenzy.

          Third Scene (998 - 1214):
Consider Jocasta's ongoing aspersion of oracles in the light of what is
about to happen. At what point does she begin to suspect the truth? Why
does Oedipus remain ignorant? Note the way the Chorus takes Oedipus'
hope and runs with it, imagining him to be the foundling son of a god.

          Fourth Scene (1215 - 1310):
Aristotle believed Oedipus Rex to be the finest of all tragedies because the
protagonist's recognition of the truth coincides with the reversal of his
fortunes. Where exactly does this occur?

          Fourth Stasimon (1311 - 1350):
Oedipus has become the paradigm of misfortune.

          Fifth Scene (1351 - 1432):
What was Oedipus trying to do when he found his mother/wife dead? Is
blinding an appropriate (self) punishment?

          Sixth Scene and Exodus (1499 - end):
Does anything surprise you about the way Oedipus views disaster in this
scene? Is Creon fair to Oedipus? Why do Oedipus' daughter remain so
special to him? What effect does blindness have open Oedipus' wisdom?

After the students read:
Return now to the theme of fate which is central to this play (and indeed,
all Greek drama). Discuss the social attitudes that identify the ancient
Greeks. What are the Greek concerned about in this play? How did they
feel about prophesy, priests, the gods, and fate? How did pride (hubris)
and arrogance affect Oedipus' fate? What in his personality brought about
his fate when others tried to turn him away from it?

Source: ftp://scweb.esuhsd.org/programs/english/four/oedipus_the_king/study_questions_1.doc

Web site to visit: ftp://scweb.esuhsd.org/

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