
#Oedipus and the blind prophet tells him quote free#
This shows how fate and free will cannot be escaped no matter how much someone tries, if it was made to happen, it just happens. He ends up plainly humiliated of this discovery notwithstanding all the safety measures that were taken by King Laius and his wife to avoid the prophecy being fulfilled and at last its fulfillment comes true. Due to this, they decided to throw him away but was rescued and adopted by the Polybus of Corinth and Merope who nursed him until he became big enough. He also narrates about a child who was born and left on the road to die by his parents because they feared a prophecy which had been prophesied on them and they did not want the child to fulfil the prophecy. As they talk, the shepherd enters the room and says that it is Oedipus who killed the king. The survivor was a shepherd and he is the only person who could tell who really killed king Laius. On hearing this, king Oedipus remembers how he met a man on the way, the man threatened him and he killed him together with his servants but one servant escaped. Jocasta then narrates to Oedipus how king Laius was arrested on the way by unknown men and killed together with his servants. The prophecy continues to say that his own child would take Jocasta, his wife and together they will get children. She tells him that a prophet had once said that Laius would be killed by his child. Jocasta opens up everything for him to know about the prophecy. There is a prophecy which was made when Laius was alive and Oedipus does not know about it. Dismayed by this allegation, Creon requests evidence, however, afore doing anything, Jocasta enters the room with an aim of mediating (Jocasta was the wife to the late king Laius and also sister to Prince Creon and currently the wife to Oedipus). Bewildered and insulted, Oedipus is persuaded that Creon set this up intentionally and blames Creon for attempting to assume control over the honored position. At long last, after a much heated debate Tiresias discloses to Oedipus that Oedipus murdered the King Laius.

The blind prophet by the name Tiresias is told about the death of king Laius by Oedipus but refuses to tell the truth because the truth she has might bring more complications and more harm than what had happened. The rising activity of the play arises when a blind prophet is brought before the king. The oracle of Apollo tells Prince Creon that the plague is as a result of the killing of king Laius, who was the king of Thebes and whom King Oedipus predeceases. Oedipus is caring such that he doesn’t want the people of Thebes to be tormented. To know the cause of this plague, King Oedipus decides to send his brother in law, Prince Creon to talk to the Oracle of Apollo and know the cause of the plague tormenting the country.

This is because there has been a lethal torment that has cleared Oedipus’ nation and his men of the country have come to Oedipus to ask for assistance. The king is much concerned about the wellbeing of the Thebes people. This happens at the palace of the Theban King Oedipus. The play starts with Oedipus addressing the general population of Thebes and to a priest. Tiresias says what is planned by fate to come will come regardless of whether she talks or not, “Well, it will come what will, though I be mute”. This paper shows what the play is saying about fate and free will. At long last, the climax comes next and is regularly viewed as the defining moment of the story/play. The exposition clarifies the thought/hypothesis of the story. The determination is the point at which the issue or question in the play is understood. The falling activity is after the peak and guides the reader towards the determination.

The rising activity takes after exposition and works towards the greatest part of a play. The plot of a play contains a rising activity, falling activity, determination, exposition and peak. The purpose of this paper is to expound on the plot of “Oedipus rex”.
