Tiresias. has written: 'Notes from the overground.'
Tiresias tells Odysseus to make a journey inland, carrying an oar, until he finds a people who do not know what the sea is. He is to offer a sacrifice to Poseidon and then return home, where he will make peaceful sacrifices to the gods.
Oedipus is outraged at Tiresias' prophecy. He thinks Tiresias is lying to him and was "put up" to telling him that by Creon. Oedipus is so furious with Tiresias, that in the process he pushes Tiresias into making another prophecy (more of a premonition) that Oedipus will be blind.
When Oedipus asks the blind prophet Tiresias who killed the previous king Laius, Tiresias states that he knows but wishes he didn't. Oedipus furiously accuses Tiresias of the murder of (Oedipus'own father), Laius - whom, of course Oedipus actually killed unknowingly.
That is the correct spelling of Tiresias, a legendary blind prophet of Thebes.
He suspects that Tiresias has been bribed to oppose him.
The name of the blind prophet is Tiresias.
Tiresias of Thebes is unique for being a blind prophet who lived both as a man and a woman, having experienced life from both perspectives. This duality gives Tiresias a deep understanding of human nature and the ability to foresee the future with great accuracy. His wisdom and insight make him a respected figure in Greek mythology.
Tiresias is a Roman name itself. Tiresias was the name of the blind prophet of Thebes, who forecast that Oedipus would kill his father and marry his mother.
Tiresias is blind. (He also had a sex change.)
Tiresias predicts that Odysseus will die an old man at sea.
In Greek mythology, Tiresias was blinded by the goddess Athena as a punishment for seeing her bathing. Tiresias was later granted the gift of prophecy by the gods to compensate for his loss of sight.