"O light, may I ne'er look on thee again." (1226)
Apex Swag :P
Climax.
climaxThe climax
"O light, may I ne'er look on thee again." "Woe! woe! woe! woe! All cometh clear at last."
"O light, may I ne'er look on thee again." "Woe! woe! woe! woe! All cometh clear at last."
In the ancient Greek play, "Oedipus Rex," the climax arrives in the second half of the drama with Oedipus' self-blinding with pins from his mother's dress. His horrible transgressions having been revealed, Oedipus cannot bear to continue on in life with sight; he can barely continue to live at all.
"Woe!Woe!woe!woe! all cometh clear at last" (1225)
oedipus learns his identity from the shepard
climax
Climax.
climaxThe climax
"O light, may I ne'er look on thee again." "Woe! woe! woe! woe! All cometh clear at last."
"O light, may I ne'er look on thee again." "Woe! woe! woe! woe! All cometh clear at last."
In the ancient Greek play, "Oedipus Rex," the climax arrives in the second half of the drama with Oedipus' self-blinding with pins from his mother's dress. His horrible transgressions having been revealed, Oedipus cannot bear to continue on in life with sight; he can barely continue to live at all.
"Woe! woe! woe! woe! all cometh clear at last." (1225) "O light, may I ne'er look on thee again." (1226)
In lines 240 onward, Oedipus declares that as punishment for the murderer of Laius, he will banish the culprit from Thebes and calls for a curse upon him. In lines 254-55, Oedipus specifies that this murderer is forbidden to partake in any religious rites or communal gatherings, effectively isolating him from society and its sacred practices.
(1225)
"O light, may I ne'er look on thee again." "Woe! woe! woe! woe! All cometh clear at last."