Self-Deception In Oedipus The King

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What would you do if someone told you you would end up killing your father and marrying your mother when you grow up? You would do anything to keep that from happening, wouldn’t you? Oedipus did in Oedipus the King by Sophocles. Unfortunately, Oedipus fails in avoiding his fate. Faced with a choice between pursuing the truth which everyone tells him would lead to his destruction or accepting a life without knowing any better, Oedipus chooses self-knowledge over self-deception. This makes Oedipus a perfect example of a tragic hero. In Greek drama, a tragic hero is a protagonist of a noble birth who possesses a tragic flaw that leads to his down fall but shows the courage to accept responsibility for his own actions. Oedipus is of high rank, a member of the nobility. The Priest says to Oedipus, “Oedipus, king, we bend to you, your power—we implore you, all of us on our knees: find us strength, rescue!” (Sophocles l. 50-53). In these lines, the Priest is speaking for others by telling Oedipus that he gives them strength and that they look up to him. Since his people look up to him because he is the king, it shows that he has a lot of power over his people. The Priest, is speaking for everyone when he is speaking to Oedipus. Oedipus starts speaking and he says, “Speak out, speak to us all. I …show more content…

In the previous paragraph, he is opening up of what the problem is and now he is going to continue telling his wife about the situation that shows that he has a tragic flaw. He says, “… I can hear him cry, “You are fated to couple with your mother, you will bring a breed of children into the light no man can bear to see — you will kill your father, the one who gave you life!” (Page 1146, lines 868- 882). While going to Delphi, Oedipus has a run in with an oracle that planned his life out for him. At this point of the Oedipus is going to tell her how his father died. He continues by

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