Theme Of Blindness In Oedipus Rex

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Physical blindness is a disability, though what is worse is a blindness to the truth. This form of blindness is one of the key themes of Sophocles’s Oedipus Rex, a story of how fate always finds a way regardless of how much one blinds themselves to it. There are several instances of this irony throughout the story, exemplified in various characters and situations they encounter.
One of the best examples of blindness throughout this story is Oedipus himself, the main character. He is a rather prideful man, and king of the land of Thebes that is infected with a murderous plague. At the heart of the plague is a cursed man, whom Oedipus sets out to find and murder. One of the first things Oedipus does in his quest to discover the cursed man is to have a blind prophet brought to him to reveal the facts. This blind man, Teresias, may be blind to his physical surroundings, but he sees the truth more clearly than other men. This is shown when Teresias refuses to talk to Oedipus about the curse, telling him, “I will not bring this pain upon us both, neither on you nor on myself. Why is it you question me and waste your labor? I will tell you nothing” (lines 358-360). Teresias sees not only the …show more content…

When Jocasta became pregnant and gave birth, the baby’s ankles were cut and he was sent away to die. After that, she does not know what became of him, though Oedipus is ailed with club foot – a result of the damage done to him as a newborn. When Jocasta tells him of this, Oedipus begins asking questions about Laius. He was killed at a crossroads and had graying hair, she says, and Oedipus begins to recall a man that he once killed at a crossroads, years before. “I have a deadly fear,” he says to Jocasta, “that the old seer had eyes” (lines 811-813). Indeed, Teresias could clearly see what Oedipus and Jocasta did not want

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