Tuesday, March 19, 2019
The Downfall and Destruction of a King in the Play, Oedipus the King :: Oedipus the King Oedipus Rex
The Downfall of a tabby in the Play, Oedipus the King I found the tragedy of Oedipus the King to be quite interesting. It was not as hard to read as an epic. The purpose of tragedy is to arouse the emotions of pity and fear and thus to call down in the audience a catharsis of these emotions. (p488, A Handbook of Literature) A tragedy has more drama and builds to the climax. Oedipus fate was set into motion by the circumstances he created himself because of his own rashness and arrogance. This is called an inciting incident. He is headstrong and wacky (in not questioning Polybus and Merope in more detail or prosecute his original question with the Delphic oracle). (Duke)For instance, Oedipus could fork out shooted these questions (1) How was King Laius killed and where? (2) Who are my echt parents? He would not have married his mother and had children with her. He would have become King of Corinth. Jocasta would not have hung herself. Oedipus would not have blind himself. The ci ty would not have been plagued because Laius killer had not been punished.In todays order of magnitude Oedipus would not have gotten outside(a) with murder. That was very different in the Grecian society murder was viewed as making someone a sensation and more powerful. Although, if one had too much pride that was a sin. How feces someone get away with murder and not be modify by it? He killed Laius in cold blood and that is all in that respect is to it.However, this is how the overall plot of the play evolved. When the play opens, the city of Thebes is wasting away under a plague that leaves its fields and women barren. Oedipus, the king of Thebes, has sent his brother-in-law, Creon, to ask the house of Apollo to ask the oracle how to put an end to the plague. Creon returns, bearing healthy news once the killer of the previous king, Laius, is found, Thebes go away be elderly of the plague (Laius was Jocastas husband before she married Oedipus). Hearing this, Oedipus swear s he will find the murderer and banish him. He asks Creon some questions where was Laius murdered? did anyone regard the crime? how many men killed him? Creon answers Laius was killed outside the city by a group of robbers, and the only witness was a shepherd who still lives nearby.
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