Oedipus and Fate                Fate: an inevitable and often adverse  eruptcome, condition, or end. Ancient Greeks believed that their destiny was  non in their control, but that from the   xxiv hours they were born, it was already determined.  Whether this was  merely a  look of shifting the   cursed off of themselves or  non can still be debated, but I do believe that Oedipuss   life history and his destiny were fated and no matter how hard he tried he could not escape it.                When he was told that he would kill his  beginner and follow his  acquire, he did not  only when choose to ignore it or not attempt to do anything to prevent it, he went far away from who he believed were his parents to a place called Thebes believing that this act would let him escape his fate.  However, what he did not  fill in was that Polybus and Merope were not his birth parents, thereby enforcing the  point that it was fate that directed Oedipuss life because he had no way of    knowing that they were not, in fact, his  dead on target parents.                Again, fate took  sustenance of Oedipuss life when he came upon a wealthy  domain with his servants where three roads meet.  Although it was not a wise  weft to kill the  mankind and  nearly all of his servants, it was not  ineluctably as horrible of a crime as it would be considered today since the man had insulted and assaulted Oedipus.  True, he should  cause been more  cagey in his actions since the Oracle told him that he would kill his father and marry his mother, he had no  reason  away to believe that Polybus and Merope were not his  true parents, and even if they were not, what were the chances that this random man he came upon would turn out to be his real father?

                In the end of the play, Oedipus reacts to everything that has happened by gouging his eyes out because he was so blind to what he had done.  However, in the ending of the play, it is not himself that Oedipus blames, but says that the gods, and in  picky Apollo, ordained what he himself did.                In conclusion, fate dictated Oedipuss life, not Oedipus himself because he did  extend to escape what the Oracle foretold but, unknowingly, he walked straight into it.  How could he have known that Polybus and Merope were not his parents?  How was Oedipus to know that this man he chanced upon at the crossroads was, in fact, his true father and the Jocasta was his true mother?  There was no way Oedipus could have figured out these things to save himself from his misery, because it was fate, and fate is inevitable.                                           If you  wishing to get a  to the full essay, order it on our website: 
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