preview

Blindness In Oedipus The King Essay

Decent Essays

Even those who acquire the physical ability to see may be blind to truth and the comprehension of it. Although humans have a large capacity for knowledge, even the smartest individual is prone to error and may be ultimately sightless to the obvious solution due to what they chose not to see. This theme of constant and initial blindness becomes recurring in Sophocles’ Oedipus the King. This recurring theme seems to play an important role in the development of the events and characters in Oedipus the King. The tragic hero Oedipus, for example, is the quintessential example of a character who experiences continual blindness. This continual blindness contributes to the dire fate of Oedipus when at the conclusion of the play he finally realizes that he had actually been blind to the truth for many years. Jocasta, Oedipus’ mother and wife, is another …show more content…

When the plague in Thebes is revealed to Oedipus in the beginning of the play, he immediately tries to solve the murder mystery by sending for the blind prophet Teiresias. Oedipus refuses to believe Teiresias’ accusation that his dreadful prophecy is true and he is in fact the murderer. Oedipus’ constant mocking of Teiresias in this scene leads him to stating the harsh reality that "You (Oedipus) have your eyes but see not where you are in sin, nor where you live, nor whom you live with." (Teiresias, lines 465 - 468.) As the play progresses, it is revealed that Teiresias’ accusation about Oedipus’ prophecy is indeed correct. The irony that is held in this particular scene involving Oedipus and Tiresias becomes a significant element in the theme of blindness throughout the play. Although Teiresias is physically blind, he can accurately see the horror of Oedipus’ past, present and future. On the contrary, Oedipus can physically see clearly but is absolutely blind towards his inevitable fate that the gods placed upon

Get Access