Theme Of Fate In Oedipus The King

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Oedipus the King is about the effect of blindness on a person’s fate. In this play by Sophocles, a man, Oedipus, is given power over Thebes after answering a simple riddle. The Oracle of Delphi tells Oedipus he is “fated to couple with your mother” and “kill your father,” (Sophocles 873-5). Oedipus, the adoptive son of King Polybus and Queen Merope of Corinth, pooled all of his effort together to reverse this prophecy, but by this time, he had already fulfilled it. In the eyes of the ancient Greeks, free will was unattainable because they believed in the truth of the gods and the prophets. Oedipus’ metaphorical blindness made him disregard his prophecy, and although he tried to use free will to change his fate, the gods had already set it and that was that. After Oedipus was told his fate, he fled to Thebes. Out of unneeded anger, Oedipus irrationally murders a man on his way there before he arrives at Thebes and gains kingship. While king, he wed and had children with an older woman. Not once did he use his free will in thinking through each of these choices. Oedipus was adopted an...

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