Character Analysis Of Oedipus At Colonus By Sophocles

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Oedipus at Colonus In the short story Oedipus at Colonus by Sophocles, we see our once valiant and heroic antagonist Oedipus reverse his entire character. In the end of Oedipus the King and the beginning of this story, we learn that Oedipus has been reduced to a lowly, blind peasant who has been exiled from Thebes and lives his life wandering the grounds of Greece. As he came to the city of Colonus, he ended his journey and realized he was meant to find his death there. Accompanied by his daughters, Antigone and Ismene, he reaches out to Theseus (King of Colonus) for assistance regarding his inevitable fate. This story has very little action, and there is ultimately no resolution. The first conflict encountered in this story is Oedipus and Antigone sitting in the forbidden garden of the Eumenides, in which the chorus curses them for, and they eventually move. The next conflict we see is Creon bullying Oedipus and abducting his daughters, and both were saved by Theseus. The final conflict is between Polynices and Oedipus when Polynices asks for his father’s help regarding the war between himself and his younger brother, Eteocles. Oedipus refuses to return to Thebes for any reason and curses both Polynices and Eteocles saying that they will be the death of one another battle. On this note, Polynices only asks for a proper burial from his sisters Theseus was a very important Greek hero who combined strength, power and wisdom. He was also the mythical founder of Athens, Greece. In comparison to Oedipus, they were very much similar. Theseus and Oedipus were both faced with hardships as adolescents and adulthood as well and they were both unknowingly born into royalty. Not only is Theseus a hero in his own realm of mythology, but he is also a hero in this story. From the moment he learned of Oedipus and Antigone’s presence, he had been nothing less than kind and

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