Figurative Blind In Sophocles Oedipus The King

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A man who can see can struggle to see more than a man who cannot see. In the play Oedipus Rex, Sophocles used the motif of sight as a metaphor to knowledge and literal sight. Oedipus, the king because of his hubris was blind in two ways. Blind in the way he failed to see he was not destined to be king and blind in a literal way, he blinded himself because he found out about the truth of his parents. Oedipus the king had a figurative blindness that would make him learn the truth about himself and would devastate him. When Oedipus was a child, his parents Jocasta and Laius had sent him away to be killed because of a prophecy told to them by a blind prophet named Tiresias. The prophecy stated that the son of Jocasta and Laius would kill his …show more content…

Since Oedipus was blinded in a way of understanding, in addition to his hubris he mocked Tiresias’ characteristic of literal blindness because he was angry Tiresias would not tell him the truth. But Tiresias having more knowledge in every way, shape and form, rebuttals saying that Oedipus was blind to the truth for so long (Parallelism). Furthermore, another example of his figurative blindness was about the truth of his whole life and his biological parents. Oedipus did not have any clue of his biological parents Laius and Jocasta. Oedipus was so blind that he would get so mad at anyone who brought up this idea of Laius and Jocasta being his parents. Tiresias was the only man who could bring up this idea because he knew the truth. Oedipus asked Tiresias the only one who knows the truth, “Come here, you pious fraud. Tell me, / when did you ever prove yourself a prophet” (Prologue 443-444). As more as the story falls into place Oedipus was forced to start realizing the truth. Oedipus being resilient ignored the fact that Tiresias was a highly known prophet and was trying to ignore the fact because he did not tell him the truth. Oedipus did kill his father and marry his mother and as soon as he accepted the truth he could not handle it and inflicted self-pain (Polysyndeton). Tiresias though literally blind, can see more than Oedipus can ever see with his actual …show more content…

Oedipus was blinded when he found out the truth of his parents. The prophecy also stated that he would enter Thebes with sight and leave without it. Oedipus’ physical blindness left him to the wrongs in his life and with nothing to look at because his eyes were gone he was forced to think about his life decisions and had to deal with it. An example of his physical blindness is when he went blind, “…Looking straight up into the points, / he digs them down the sockets of his eyes, crying…” (Episode 5 1404-1405). Tiresias’ physical blindness leaded up to Oedipus’ physical blindness because Tiresias would not speak of the truth and when Oedipus finds out it devastates him and he cannot handle it and pokes his eyes out. With Oedipus being blinded he had the physical pain as reminders for his hubris and was just as painful as the truth about his past and parents. In addition another example of his physical blindness was after he blinded himself and was talking to the chorus. He said that eyes were no good to him anymore, “What good were eyes to me? / Nothing I could see could bring me joy” (5th Stasimon 1471-1472). Now at the end of the story, Oedipus realized the danger of his blindness of the truth he has caused to friends and family around him. Oedipus had fettered himself when he blinded himself because he could not see anymore. The figurative blindness on Oedipus had a enormous toll on himself and

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