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Attempting to Cheat Fate. Would it ever seem reasonable for a winner of
the Nobel Prize in Literature to be associated with a king ...
... in negative behavior, Jack proceeds to lie, cheat, and even ... While attempting to develop
who she is and/or will ... actions, and that God decided her fate based on ...
... it is too, really grand.'"' Tesman is attempting to comfort ... in control, she has another
human beings fate in her ... descended to a coward and a cheat, bring only ...
... Will teachers cheat or school administration “fudge” schools to ... could be the judged
of their own fate. ... Mayors have failed miserably at attempting to solve ...
... was the victim of a clever scheme to cheat her out ... is very probable that Charles
Dickens was attempting to speak ... the child a chance to escape the fate of her ...
Submitted by poloxking on May 9, 2005
Category: Book Reports
Words: 1214 | Pages: 5
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Would it ever seem reasonable for a winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature to be associated with a king who murders his father and procreates with his mother? It is possible because of one quotation by the 1921 Nobel Prize Literature winner Anatole France, that he is connected to the notorious king Oedipus from Sophocles’ famous play, ‘Oedipus Rex’. “It is only human nature to think wisely and act foolishly” (Anatole France) best exemplifies the theme in Sophocles’ ‘Oedipus Rex’: fate cannot be cheated nor altered. It is human to try and change fate, which is a foolish act because it is impossible to do. This can be seen in many aspects of the play including the context and characters of the story and the hubris of the royal family; Jocasta, Lauis and Oedipus. Within each of these components many different literary devices can be used to further explain how the theme of the story relates to the quote by Anatole France.
A prime example can be seen in the 2nd Episode where Oedipus confesses everything to Jocasta from the prophecy to the incident when he killed a man similar to Lauis’ description. The parts of his monologue that best illustrate changing fate and being foolish are when Oedipus says, “ And so unknown to mother and father I set out for Delphi…he [the oracle] flashed before my eyes a future great with pain, terror…I can hear him cry, ‘You are fated to couple with your mother…you will kill your father, the man who gave you life!’ I heard all that and ran…Now, Jocasta, I will tell you all. Making my way toward this triple crossroad I began to see a herald, then a brace of colts drawing a wagon, and mounted on the bench…a man, just as you’ve described him…I strike him in anger! … I killed them all- every mother’s son!” This exemplifies the statement that trying to change fate is foolish because in attempting to avoid his awful destiny, he kills his own father. One might argue that this is not a well thought out example because...
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