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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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THE THEBAN SAGA 383<br />

middle of my head and struck me with the two-pronged goad. But he paid for<br />

this with interest; struck promptly by the staff in this hand of mine, he quickly<br />

tumbled out of the chariot. I killed them all. 1<br />

The old man, whom Oedipus did not recognize, was Laius. The curse of<br />

Pelops was being fulfilled.<br />

OEDIPUS AND THE SPHINX<br />

So Oedipus came to Thebes, a city in distress; not only was the king dead, but also<br />

the city was plagued by a monster sent by Hera, called Sphinx (which means "strangler").<br />

This creature had the face of a woman, the body of a lion, and the wings of<br />

a bird. It had learned a riddle from the Muses, which it asked the Thebans. Those<br />

who could not answer the riddle, it ate; and it was prophesied that Thebes would<br />

be free of the Sphinx only when the riddle was answered. The riddle was: "What<br />

is it that has one name that is four-footed, two-footed, and three-footed?" 2 No Theban<br />

had been able to find the answer; and in despair, the regent Creon (son of Menoeceus<br />

and brother of Jocasta) offered both the throne and his sister as wife to<br />

anyone who could do so. Oedipus succeeded. "Man," said he, "is the answer: for<br />

as an infant he goes upon four feet; in his prime upon two; and in old age he takes<br />

a stick as a third foot." And so the Sphinx threw itself off the Theban acropolis;<br />

Oedipus became king of Thebes and husband of the widowed queen, his mother.<br />

THE RECOGNITION OF OEDIPUS<br />

Thus the prophecy of Apollo was fulfilled; what remained was for the truth to<br />

be discovered. There are three versions, two Homeric and one Sophoclean, of<br />

Oedipus' fate. According to Homer, Epicasta (Homer's name for Jocasta) married<br />

her own son "and the gods speedily made it known to mortals. Unhappily<br />

he reigned on at Thebes, but she went down to the house of Hades, fastening a<br />

noose to the roof of the lofty hall" (Odyssey 11. 271). In the Iliad, Oedipus is spoken<br />

of as having fallen in battle. In this version, another wife is the mother of<br />

the children of Oedipus.<br />

The most widely accepted story, however, is the later version, that of Sophocles.<br />

Oedipus and Jocasta lived happily together, and she bore him two sons,<br />

Polynices and Eteocles, and two daughters, Antigone and Ismene. After many<br />

years, a plague afflicted Thebes, and the oracle of Apollo advised the Thebans<br />

that it was the result of a pollution on their state, for the murderer of Laius was<br />

in their midst. At this point, Polybus died, and the messenger who brought the<br />

news also brought the invitation to Oedipus from the people of Corinth to become<br />

their king. Oedipus, still thinking that Merope was his mother, refused to<br />

return to Corinth; but the messenger—who was the same shepherd to whom<br />

the infant exposed on Cithaeron had been given—tried to reassure him by telling<br />

him that he was not in fact the son of Merope and Polybus. Oedipus then sent

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