Oedipus is reevaluating his past actions. “What, Oedipus?
What haunts you so?” (814). Jocasta questions Oedipus about what he is thinking
about. At that point in time, Oedipus was flashing back his memory to the day
he murdered men and how that day fit the description of Jocasta’s version of
the murder of Laius so well. “Oh, but if there is any blood-tie between Laius
and this stranger… what man alive more miserable than I?” (901). Oedipus
believes he may have been the one to have murdered Laius. He is pondering his
past doings and the oracle he once received from Delphi. The oracle read, “You
are fated to couple with your mother… you will kill your father, the one who
gave you life” (873-875). He is now placing hypothetical situations in his head
that if he were indeed the murderer, was the prophecy given true?Monday, March 28, 2016
Reflections
Oedipus is reevaluating his past actions. “What, Oedipus?
What haunts you so?” (814). Jocasta questions Oedipus about what he is thinking
about. At that point in time, Oedipus was flashing back his memory to the day
he murdered men and how that day fit the description of Jocasta’s version of
the murder of Laius so well. “Oh, but if there is any blood-tie between Laius
and this stranger… what man alive more miserable than I?” (901). Oedipus
believes he may have been the one to have murdered Laius. He is pondering his
past doings and the oracle he once received from Delphi. The oracle read, “You
are fated to couple with your mother… you will kill your father, the one who
gave you life” (873-875). He is now placing hypothetical situations in his head
that if he were indeed the murderer, was the prophecy given true?
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As you most likely finished, yes it was true and yes he was punished. But not by death. Him gouging out his eyes and living in exile may not be death, but plays an even more brutal punishment for himself. As the lone perpetrator and victim, he must lives out his days in suffering
ReplyDeleteI really liked your political cartoon. The character feels as if he is being followed by his own shadow, as Oedipus feels haunted by his own actions. This connection could also indicate his past, since the shadow falls behind the character in the cartoon.
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