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Motif Of Blindness In Oedipus

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Oedipus enters the play with the belief that his life was great. He felt powerful and honored by all of the townspeople, as they were relying on him to save the town from the plague. As the play begins, the motif of blindness is introduced to Oedipus as he embarks on his journey of ups and downs, mystery, and recurring blindness. He thinks he has the ability to see everything in terms of the murder mystery of King Laois, but he was actually blind of the truth. The appearance of blindness continues as Oedipus accuses Teiresias, the old blind man, of being blind, not only in vision, but in knowledge. “You sightless, witless, senseless, mad old man” (Sophocles 19). This scene is where the motif of blindness emerges and begins to take action. As the play progresses, so does Oedipus’ interest in learning about where he came from and his familial past. However, Oedipus …show more content…

As he is married to Jocasta, along with his loving children, he believes that his life is finally going well and that no harm can be done. This belief on it’s own shows a great deal of how Oedipus is blind to the truth of his family, while the people around him are all very much aware. He is a fine sighted man, with a blinded mind. At the very end of the novel, the development of blindness is evident. When Oedipus finds Jocasta dead by suicide, he finally learns the truth and is no longer seeing blind: Jocasta was not only his wife, but his mother, as well. His children are not only his children, but also his siblings. “Too long been blind to those for whom I was searching! From this hour, go in darkness” (Sophocles 69). This revelation brings Oedipus to face real-life blindness, as he stabs his own eyes out because he cannot handle seeing his children/siblings now that the truth is known. At this point in the play, the progression of blindness has noticeably grown from being just a metaphor, to being real for

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