Guided Reading Questions

Directions: As you read the text, use the following questions to guide your note taking. Remember to always cite specific evidence from the text.

Prologue and Parodos: Due Date: ______

  1. What has been happening in Thebes that brings all members of the community to Oedipus’s palace for answers?

There is a motif of death. (Death is mentioned repeatedly.)

  • The people are dying: “Thebes is tossed on a murdering sea / And cannot lift her head from the death surge” (26-27) “over a dead city” (57)
  • Plants/crops, cattle, and unborn children are dying: “A rust consumes the buds and fruits of the earth / the herds are sick; children die unborn” (28-29)

There is a plague in Thebes.

***Motif – a reoccurring image or idea

  1. What deed had Oedipus accomplished that makes the people believe that he is “the man surest in mortal ways/And wisest in the ways of God”?

He solved the riddle of the sphinx: “You saved us from the sphinx” (38-39)

  1. What do the people of Thebes want Oedipus to do for them?

They want Odysseus to help them.

Suppliants – people who are asking for help

  • “Find us our safety, find us a remedy” (44)
  • “…act in a time of troubles, and act well” (47)
  • “…restore / life to your city!” (48-49)
  • “You brought us fortune; be the same again! (55)

***Repetition is used for emphasis.

  1. Who is Creon?

“Brother of the Queen” - Oedipus’ brother-in-law (uncle) (72)

  1. Who does Oedipus send to Delphi to learn how to save Thebes?

Creon: “I have sent Kreon, / …To Delphi, Apollo’s place of revelation, / To learn there, if he can, / What act of pledge of mine may save the city.” (71-75)

  1. What suggestion does Creon make when Oedipus asks about the message from the god, Apollo?

First, he suggests they speak in private.

By exile or death: “blood for blood” (104) -

This is an example of dramatic irony becausethe audience knows that Oedipus killed King Laios, but Oedipus does not know this.

***Dramatic Irony: When the audience knows more than the characters; contributes to suspense.

  1. Who is Laios?

The former king of Thebes: “Laios once ruled this land, / Before you came to govern us.

  1. Why has no one made an attempt to find out the truth about what had happened to Laois?

Oedipus finds it incredulous that Laois’ killer has not been brought to justice. The people claim they were too consumed with the dangers of the Sphinx: “The riddling Sphinx’s song / Made us deaf to all mysteries but her own.” (132-133)

  1. To which three gods does the Chorus pray for help?

Apollo, Athena, and Artemis

  1. What does the Chorus want the gods to do for them?

They want the gods to get rid of the plague: “O gods, descend! Like three streams leap against / The fires of our grief, the fires of darkness; / Be swift to bring us res!” (14-16)

***Figurative Language – Metaphor (The gods are compared to water putting out the fires of the plague.)

Additional Notes:

Scene 1 and Ode 1: Due Date: ______

  1. What promise does Oedipus make to anyone who comes forward with information about Laios’s murder?

He promises that no harm will come to the person who comes forward even if he has kept silent out of fear.

  1. Why does Oedipus berate his people with regard to King Laios?

They have not taken efforts to find the murderer. If there had been no command from the Oracle, they would have allowed the murderer of King Laios to go unpunished.

  1. Who does the Choragos suggest could help Oedipus locate the whereabouts of the murderer?

Tiresias – a holy prophet

“In whom, alone of all men, truth was born.” (82)

Clairvoyant – A person who is intuitive/perceptive

Tiresias is a clairvoyant

  1. When Oedipus asks the prophet to reveal the name of the murderer, what is the prophet’s response?
  1. What conclusion does Oedipus jump to when the prophet continually refuses to give specific information about the events surrounding the death of King Laios?
  1. Who does the prophet finally reveal as the murderer of King Laios?
  1. Who is said to be most concerned with the fate of Laios’s murder?
  1. Who does Oedipus accuse of being behind a plot to destroy him?
  1. Who does the Chorus say will follow the killer wherever he goes?
  1. What seems to be the attitude of the Chorus in Ode I toward the prophet’s revelation?

Additional Notes:

Scene 2 and Ode 2: Due Date: ______

  1. Why is Creon upset at the opening of scene 2?
  1. What is Creon’s defense against the accusations against him?
  1. Who does the Choragos claim can settle the dispute between Oedipus and Creon?
  1. What convinces Oedipus to allow Creon to leave?
  1. What “proof” does Iocaste offer that prophets do not tell the truth?
  1. What is Oedipus’s reaction to hearing that Laios was killed in a place where three highways met?
  1. What has become of the only surviving member of the attack on King Laios’s party?
  1. Why had Oedipus fled Corinth many years before?
  1. Who does Oedipus insist Iocaste send for?
  1. According to Ode II, what can be said about the hearts of mortals?

Additional Notes:

Scene 3 and Ode 3: Due Date: ______

  1. To whom does Iocaste make an offering?
  1. What news does the messenger from Corinth bring to Thebes?
  1. How does Oedipus react to the Corinthian messenger’s news?
  1. How did Polybos die?
  1. Who does Oedipus claim to still fear in Corinth?
  1. Specifically, what is Oedipus afraid of in Corinth?
  1. What revelation does the messenger make to Oedipus?
  1. How did Polybos come to raise Oedipus as his own son?
  1. Who begs Oedipus to forget about finding the truth of his parentage?
  1. Upon what mountain had the infant Oedipus been found?

Additional Notes:

Scene 4 and Ode 4: Due Date: ______

  1. Who identifies the old shepherd as the man who spared the infant Oedipus?
  1. Where does the shepherd say he’d tended his sheep?
  1. How did the shepherd and the messenger from Corinth know each other?
  1. How does the shepherd react when the messenger states that King Oedipus was the baby the shepherd had given him?
  1. How does Oedipus react to the shepherd’s reluctance to speak?
  1. Who had originally given the infant to the shepherd?
  1. Why had the infant been handed over to the shepherd to begin with?
  1. Why didn’t the shepherd destroy the infant as instructed?
  1. What truth does Oedipus learn?
  1. Whose “great days [are] like ghosts gone”?

Additional Notes:

Exodos: Due Date: ______

  1. What news does the second messenger bring?
  1. What did the messenger claim to have heard beyond the locked doors to the Queen’s

apartment?

  1. What took the messenger’s attention away from the din in the Queen’s room?
  1. What happens to Iocaste?
  1. What did Oedipus do after he held Iocaste in his arms?
  1. What does Oedipus claim he will do now that the truth is known?
  1. Who does Oedipus blame for his fate?
  1. Who takes over as the ruler of Thebes?
  1. Who has been sent for to say good-bye to Oedipus?
  1. What finally becomes of Oedipus?

Additional Notes:

GLOSSARY OF NAMES AND PLACES

Cadmusfounder of the city of Thebes

Zeussupreme rule of the Olympian gods

Apollogod of the sun, poetry, music, and truth

Delphishrine of Apollo, considered the holist place in ancient Greece, and the

center of the world

Sphinxmonster with the head and breasts of a woman and the body of a lion that

terrorized Thebes with her deadly riddle

Delosisland in the Aegean and birthplace of Apollo and Artemis

Artemistwin sister of Apollo, goddess of the moon and the hunt

Athenagoddess of wisdom and battle, born in full armor

Bacchusalso called Dionysus; god of fertility, wine, and ecstatic joy. His followers

were a group of frenzied women called the Bacchantes

Parnassusmountain hovering above the shrine of Delphi

Dorianmeaning of noble birth and claiming descent from Dorus, one of the three

sons of Helen, the traditional ancestor of all Greeks

Sybildivine prophetess of the oracle of Delphi

Lysian Apolloboth god of light and wolf-killer; from the Greek word “lykos” (wolf)

Pythianmeaning “of Delhi,” where Apollo killed the monstrous snake pytho

Cythaeronmountain on which Oedipus was left to die as an infant

Heliconsacred mountain in central Greece favored by the gods, goddesses, and the nine muses

Pangod of shepherds and their flocks, with the body of a man and the horns

and hooves of a goat. He made music by playing on pipes made of reeds

CHARACTERS

King PolybusOedipus’ “parents;” King and Queen of Corinth.

& Queen Merope

OedipusKing of Thebes. As a young man, he saved the city of Thebes by solving

the riddle of the Sphinx, thus destroying the monster. He sets about

finding the murderer of the former King Laius (not knowing he’s his real

father) to save Thebes from plague.

JocastaQueen of Thebes, wife of Oedipus. She was the widow of Thebes’ former

king, Laius, and married Oedipus when he saved the city from the Sphinx.

She is also Oedipus’ mother, although she does not know this when she

marries him.

CreonThe second-in-command in Thebes, brother-in-law of Oedipus. He is

Oedipus’ trusted advisor, selected to go to the oracle at Delphi to seek

Apollo’s advice in saving the city from plague.

AntigoneOedipus’ daughter with Jacosta.

IsmeneOedipus’ daughter with Jacosta.

EteoclesOedipus’ son with Jacosta.

PolynicesOedipus’ son with Jacosta.

TiresiasA blind prophet who has guided the kings of Thebes with his advice and

counsel.

1st MessengerA man bringing news of the royal family to Oedipus.

A HerdsmanA shepherd from the nearby mountains, who once served in the house of

Laius.

2nd MessengerA man who comes from the palace to announce the death of the queen

and the blinding of Oedipus.

ChorusA group of Theban elders, and their Leader, who comment on the events

of the drama and react to its tragic progression.

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