Thursday, October 24, 2019
Oedipus, the Cursed Man Essay -- Oedipus the King Oedipus Rex
Oedipus, the Cursed Man      Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã   Have you ever  had one of those days when it seems that everything is against you, that life  could not look any bleaker than it does right now? We have all had moments like  those, but nothing can compare to the feeling Oedipus had on that dreadful day  when he found out that he was cursed by the gods, destined to kill his father  and marry his mother. This tragic story of the cursed man is told in Sophocles'  play, Oedipus the King. This essay will examine one of Oedipus' speeches, found  in lines 1183 - 1194, made before he learns of his appalling fate. It is a  passage full of dramatic irony. We, the audience, know the truth. Even Jocasta  has just come to realize the facts, but Oedipus is still unaware of the  impending doom.      Ã       Let it burst! Whatever will, whatever must!     I must know my birth, no matter how common     it may be-I must see my origins face-to-face.     She perhaps, she with her woman's pride     may well be mortified by my birth,     but I, I count myself the son of Chance,     the great goddess, giver of all good things-     I'll never see myself disgraced. She is my mother!     And the moons have marked me out, my blood brothers,     one moon on the wane, the next moon great with power.     That is my blood, my nature-I will never betray it,     never fail to search and learn my birth!     (Oedipus lines 1183-1194)      Ã       The passage begins with Oedipus crying, "Let it burst! Whatever will,  whatever must! / I must know my birth, no matter how common / it may be-I must  see my origins face-to-face" (lines 1183 - 1185). He is eager to know his past,  no matter how ugly it may be. He believes the truth can be no worse than  learning that he comes from a humbl...              ...ldren  and siblings. Again, the audience knows the truth and wishes the opposite of  what Oedipus persevered to discover. The reader wishes that he would indeed give  up the search to find his true origins. It will only result in ending his life  in horrific misery.      Ã       This short yet heartfelt speech made by Oedipus before he learns of his fate  is packed with dramatic irony. He is blinded to the truth, but the readers are  entirely aware of his dreadful fame. This makes the speech all the more painful  and wrenching for the audience. Oh how we must pity a king like Oedipus, the  cursed man. May what happened to him never happen to another.      Ã       Work Cited     Sophocles, Oedipus the King. Trans. Robert Fagles. The Norton Anthology of  World Literature. 2nd ed. Vol. A. Ed. Sarah Lawall and Maynard Mack. New York:  Norton, 2002. 617-658.      Ã       Ã       Ã                        
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