Saturday, October 12, 2019
Justice in Oedipus the King :: Oedipus Rex Essays
      Justice in Oedipus the King                After reading Oedipus the King, one may think that  in this story, there was no     justice, and nobody could avoid their fate.  King Laius and Queen  Jocasta,     fearing the prophecy of the Delphic oracle, had the young Oedipus left on  Mount     Cithaeron to die, but the father dies and the son marries the mother  anyway.     Oedipus, seemingly a good person, also tries to avoid the second prophecy,  only     to fulfill the first.  But even through all this, I have done some  research and     feel that there was justice in Oedipus, The King, and their fate wasn't     completely sealed.                First, the murder of King Laius.  Laius seemed  to die a unwarranted death,     but he was not necessarily in complete innocence, for he had done some  malicious     things earlier in his life, such as the attempted murder of his son,  Oedipus,     and the kidnapping and rape of Chrysippus,  a young man Laius fell in  love with     before Jocasta.  And Oedipus wasn't as guilty under ancient Greek law as  he is     under our modern laws.  It was every Greek's duty to harm his/her  enemies, and     as far as Oedipus knew, King Laius was an enemy.                Queen Jocasta wasn't exactly guiltless,  either.  The great Queen had also     tried with King Laius to kill their son, and had no respect for the  prophecies     of Apollo:  "A prophet?  Listen to me and learn some peace of  mind:  no skill in     the world, nothing human can penetrate the future."  She was also the  other half     of a mother-son marriage.   Greek law considered the act, not the  motive -     meaning that even though she nor Oedipus knew they were related, they  committed     the crime.                Finally, Oedipus's guilt.  In some ways,  Oedipus was the most guilty of     them all.  Consider his 'hubris'.  He regarded himself as almost a  god, assuming     that since he alone had solved the sphinx's riddle, he was the one of the  gods'     favorites.  He was very quick to judge, and judged on the most flimsy  of     evidence.  He calls on Tiresias to tell him what he should do, and when  he     doesn't like what he hears, Oedipus says, "Your words are nothing - futile",  and     					    
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