Sunday, November 16, 2014

What is the summary of ODE 3 in Antigone?

It is the job of the Greek Chorus to both participate in
the events of the play and comment on these events.  In Antigone,
the Chorus is of Theban Elders, which suggests that they are the ones who hold the
tradition and memories of the past events that affect the story of the
play.


This play continues a story that began in
Oedipus Rex.  Oedipus, Antigone's father, tried to defy the oracle
of the gods and escape his fate.  It was ordained that he would kill his father and
marry his mother.  In trying to outwit this prediction, he actually ran right into the
events that sealed his fate.  The lesson of the story of Oedipus was that no human can
outrun or outwit the will of the gods.


The story of Oedipus
is important here, since this is what, in summary, the Chorus is reiterating in Ode 3,
which begins at line 596.  The Elders are warning the audience that they must not forget
the lessons of the past.  That, if their personal family history is free of being
"shaken by the gods," they are blessed and will not have to continue to pay the price
through generations, as Antigone must pay the price for Oedipus'
sin.


They end with a
warning:



For
indeed wide-ranging hope
is a blessing to many men,(625)
but to
many also a trick of light-minded desires.
It comes to one who knows nothing

until he burns his foot
walking in hot fire.
Hence the
old saying still shows its wisdom:(630)
Sometimes the bad seems good

to one whose wits
God leads to madness.
He will last a
short time without ruin.



By
suggesting that "[s]ometimes the bad seems good," the Chorus is cautioning the audience
from following in Antigone's footsteps and ignoring the lessons of the
past.

No comments:

Post a Comment

How is Anne's goal of wanting "to go on living even after my death" fulfilled in Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl?I didn't get how it was...

I think you are right! I don't believe that many of the Jews who were herded into the concentration camps actually understood the eno...