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Fate In Oedipus The King

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Everyone has a predestined path for their lives. However, some people think actions can be taken to alter their preordained destinies or their fates. Fate is defined, according to Merriam- Webster, as “the things that will happen to a person or thing: the future that someone or something will have or a power that is believed to control what happens in the future.” An individual’s destiny is a powerful force and ultimately inevitable. Destiny is inescapable. E.A. Sophocles demonstrates the power and inescapability of fate in his Greek Tragedy Oedipus the King. The unavoidability is shown through Oedipus’ life by a shepherd saving him from his death as a baby, Oedipus meeting and killing his father without realizing, and by unknowingly having an incestuous relationship with his mother. The first example of Oedipus’ inevitable fate is the shepherd ignoring Jocasta’s request to kill her baby, Oedipus. While Oedipus is panicking, Jocasta explains the need for murdering her baby, “there came once an oracle to Laius: if ever son were bred from me and him, by that son’s hand, it said, Laius must die” (Sophocles 36). Laius and Jocasta have confidence in the foretold future …show more content…

According to Nassaar, “In this reading, Apollo is seen as deliberately pushing Oedipus to flee to Thebes and bring about the fulfilment of the god’s dark prophecy” (147). Some put the blame of Oedipus’ fate coming true on Oedipus, himself. Others believe Oedipus did not investigate enough about the prophecy. “Had he done so, he would have discovered his real parents and avoided his fate” (Nassaar 147). Though it is true that if Oedipus had acted rationally about the prophecy he could have prevented his fate, however, fate is a powerful force and would found another way to have Oedipus complete is destiny. His destiny would have been delayed but not completely

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