The Births of Kings in 'Hamlet', by William Shakespeare and 'Oedipus Rex', by Sophocles

Essay by Jason TangUniversity, Bachelor'sA, February 1997

download word file, 3 pages 4.5

Downloaded 85 times

The Birth of Kings

Two plays, 'Hamlet', written by William Shakespeare and 'Oedipus Rex', written by Sophocles share a common bond of illusion and innocence. The protagonists in both plays appear at the beginning only to have changed so that reality has broken through the illusion with less than desirable results for either. In these two plays, two kings must leave their innocence behind as the truth leads them first, to enlightenment and then to their downfall. This is a battle between the light and the darkness, the light being the truth and the darkness being the lie. Throughout the two plays we can see that both are isolated in a world of their own, completely unaware of the truths surrounding them. In Hamlet's case, growing up under the loving care of his parents, he believes that his father died of natural causes. Or, in Oedipus' case, the main character thinks that he has escaped Apollo's prophecy that decreed that he would grow up and murder his father, the king, and marry his mother, the queen.

This eventually leads to the point at which both have their 'eyes' opened to the reality surrounding their 'illusionary' worlds. Hamlet is approached by the ghost of his dead father who reveals that his own brother, Hamlet's uncle, murdered him. Oedipus Rex discovers the truth when the blind prophet, Teiresias accuses him of being the one who murdered King Laios therefore fulfilling his destiny in which he had sought to avoid. In the end, the actions taken by both lead to their downfalls in different ways, death for Hamlet and loss of vision for Oedipus Rex.

In the beginning, we see Hamlet living in an illusion blocking him from seeing what is really there. Hamlet is under...