When Oedipus is being raised by Polybus and Merope a drunk man comes up to him one day and says he is not his father’s son. Oedipus is curious if this was true or not so he decides to ask his parents to tell him the true. His parents were, “bitterly that anyone should dare to put such a story about”(Sophocles 47). It is at this point in Oedipus’s life when he becomes “blind” because now he believes that they are his real parents when they are not. After talking with parents he then goes to Pytho, an oracle, who then tells him his prophecy that he will marry his mother and kill his father. Based on the false information from his step parents, Oedipus is now worried that he is going to kill Polybus and marry Merope. Oedipus later recalls his actions and says , “I fled away, putting the stars between me and Corinth, never to see home again, that no such horror should ever come to pass”(Sophocles 47). This action of fleeing Corinth is based on his intention, which is trying to save his parents from suffering and to prevent any “horror” from happening. Oedipus has the ambition to flee his fate but rather because of his “blindness” to the fact that Polybus and Merope aren’t his real parents his action actually pushes him closer to his fate. This proves that his actions are …show more content…
As a result he ends up killing his father and marrying his mother. This becomes known to him when the Shepherd says he gave Oedipus to Polybus and Merope. Oedipus responds by yelling, “Alas! All out! All known, no more concealment! O Light! May I never look on you again”(Sophocles 58). Oedipus has now realized that there is no escaping your fate and that the prophecy is true. Now he knows the mistakes that he has made are because he was “blind” to the information about his true parents. The line “O Light! May I never look on you again” is saying he was blinded from the truth and is foreshadowing what he is going to do next. What he actually does next is he goes to find Jocasta but finds that she has hanged herself. Oedipus’s intention to leave his parents to prevent them from suffering actually caused his real parents to suffer so much that one of the hanged themselves. He then takes the pins off of Jocasta’s dress, “ and thrusts, from full arm’s length, into his eyes - Eyes that should see no longer his shame, his guilt, no longer see those they should never have seen”(Sophocles 61). He is making himself blind because he has been blind through the whole play figuratively and now to punish himself and to suffer he makes himself blind literally. Oedipus wants his eyes to “no longer see