The Role Of Fate And Gods And Characters In Oedipus The King

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Fate and Gods: separate entities in Oedipus the King
Oedipus the King is the second book written in a trilogy by Ancient Greek play write, Sophocles. Though second, the events that take place in this play occurred, according to chronology, well before that of the first play Antigone. In Oedipus the King, the city of Thebes faces a curse, which can only be lifted by punishment of the former king’s murder, in effort to save his city; Oedipus discovers that he himself is the killer and had unknowingly fulfilled a horrendous prophecy fixed upon him at birth. Though the characters tell the story of their many efforts to avoid fate and desperate pleas to the gods in the end, they find fate inescapable. Gods and fate work very closely throughout the …show more content…

Well before these predicted events could take place, Oedipus is set to be abandoned with pinned ankles and left to die. Within the essence of the story lies the function of fate: ”…master, now you / know: your birth has doomed you” (516), these, the words of a lowly herdsman, fully encompass the idea or fate; Oedipus’s own existence, rather than intervention, or lack thereof, by humans or gods, caused this course of events, in other words, fate is static at birth. Another example of this is throughout the play when characters try to evade the fate that is bestowed upon them. “Time, who sees all, caught you / living a life you never willed” (517), this examines human will in comparison with fate and informs the reader that will is the lesser of the two, though Oedipus wills himself not to become what is prophesized of him, because this fate is established at birth, there is nothing he can do. “All! All! It all happened! / It was all true” (516), these words from Oedipus encompass his devastation and disbelief that his fate has come to be true, Oedipus is destressed by living the life fate set for …show more content…

Many prophets and oracles throughout the story pronounce the fate of the characters, which they seem to know, at least fundamentally, is unquestionable. “We can’t accept what he [the bird reader] says / but have no power to challenge him” (499), by this the reader can conclude that the predictions of the bird reader, a prophet who uses flight patterns of the birds to make predictions, good or bad will come true while the people are powerless to stop it. While characters do try to avoid their fate, the extents they must go to in effort to stop these events are exhaustive of themselves, described in the two following passages: “… the child was barely three days old / when Laios pinned its ankle joints together / then had it left…/ high up in the mountains away from any road”(504-505), these efforts included leaving their child for dead and ““I [Oedipus] fled / to somewhere I’d never see outrages / like those the god promised, happen to me” (506), abandoning their homeland. These instances further prove the power gap between humans and fate as the only option the characters consider is the most drastic option. The fact that despite the extensive efforts, the horrid events prophesized still occurred show the certainty of

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