Truth In Sophocles 'Oedipus The King'

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The fundamental idea or theme of Oedipus the King is prophecy verse truth. Time and time again Sophocles illustrates that truth whether prophesied or not; only becomes truth by acceptance. Laius and Jocasta were given a prophecy, or a truth revealed, by an oracle when they first married. When the child Oedipus was conceived, albeit accidentally, it was the start of their truth revelation. They were told that any child born of their union would kill his father, and marry his mother. Not certain that it was spoken truth but also not willing to tempt fate, Laius instructs Jocasta to kill the infant. Acting on her own truth, that of a mother's love, she spares the child. Ironically, it is Jocasta who seals the fate of all involved by defying her husband's attempt to prevent the prophecy from becoming truth. …show more content…

When he is found as an infant by a shepherd, and given to King of Corinth, rather than revealing the child's birth origin to either him or the court; he is raised as the son of the childless king and queen. In his pursuit of the truth, Oedipus learns from an oracle that he was destined to kill his father and marry his mother. Oedipus immediately leaves Corinth. As fate--or prophecy would have it, Oedipus unknowingly flees to Thebes, the land of his birth-parents. By choosing to go against what he was told would happen, Oedipus thought he could change the outcome of the prophecy. Oedipus's decision to act solely based on prophecy, rather than even attempting to explore the truth, lands him directly on a path which proved prophetic--on the way he meets and kills his biological father, King

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