Thursday, November 14, 2019
Destiny, Fate, and Free Will in Oedipus the King - A Victim of Fate :: Oedipus Rex Essays
      Oedipus the King as a Victim of Fate                 Among the first thing a historian discovers in  his study of early     civilization are records of people's belief, or faith, in powers greater  than     themselves, and their desire to understand what causes these powers to  act.     People everywhere wonder about the marvelous things in the sky and on the  earth.     What makes the rain?  How do the plants and animals live and grow and  die?  Why     are some people lucky and others unlucky?  Some believe in free will  while     others believe in fate or destiny.  In the play Oedipus the King by  Sophocles,     Oedipus was a true victim of fate.                 Gods and goddesses were believed to be  responsible for the wonders of     science, and the vagaries of human nature; therefore, according to the facts  of     this story, Oedipus was a true victim of fate for several reasons.   Laius and     Jocasta, the childless king and queen of Thebes, were told by the god  Apollo     that their son would kill his father and marry his mother (page 56).  A  son was     born to them, and they tried to make sure that the prophecy would not come  true.     They drove a metal pin through the infants ankles and gave it to a  shepherd,     with instructions to leave it to die.  The shepherd pitied the little  infant so     he gave the child to another shepherd.  This shepherd gave the baby to  a     childless king and queen of Corinth, Polybus and Merope.  This royal  couple     named the boy Oedipus, which in its Greek form Oidipous means "swollen  foot."     Oedipus was brought up believing that Polybus and Merope were his real  parents,     and Lauis and Jocasta believed that their child was dead and the prophecy  of     Apollo was false. Many years later, he was told by a drunk man at a banquet  that     he was not a true heir of Polybus (page 55).  He then went to the oracle  of     Apollo, to ask the god who his real parents were.  All he was told was  that he     would kill his father and marry his mother (page 56).  He resolved never  to     return to Corinth, to Polybus and Merope, and started out to make a new life  for     					    
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