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Fate In Oedipus The King : The Use Of Fate

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Fate exists as a common theme amongst Greek tragedies while the use of prophecy brings it to life. The prevalent use of fate and prophecy throughout Greek works like Homer’s Odyssey, Aeschylus’s Agamemnon, and Euripides’s Phoenician Women, suggests a considerable amount of significance within the Greek world. In this case, the utilization of these two major themes provokes an argument when specifically delving into Fitts and Fitzgerald’s translation of Sophocles Oedipus Rex. The reason fate and prophetic downfalls are more salient in Oedipus Rex is because it is the primary cause for Oedipus and Jocasta’s tragic flaw; Oedipus possesses the need to control and defy his fate while Jocasta progressively struggles to avoid the truth. Oedipus Rex asks whether knowing one’s fate makes it so or if fate is pre-ordained no matter what level of knowledge is obtained; Oedipus and Jocasta represents these ideas respectively. Ultimately, both characters followed a faulty path and fulfilled the tragedy.
Oedipus is a proponent of the idea of free will. He characterizes this idea on lines 791-800, when he recalls the moment he came into full knowledge of his prophesized fate, reacted, and unwittingly succumbed to the very behavior that lead him to his downfall, “As that I should lie with my own mother, breed / Children from whom all men would turn their eyes; / And that I should be my father’s murderer” (Soph. Oedipus. 791-93). Within these first lines of Oedipus’s recollection of the night

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