"...thou hast eyes, Yet see'st not in what misery thou art fallen," Tieresias tells him.
Oedipus is warned through-out the story that he ought to discontinue his search. Those who have spiritual eyes to understand and to see what he will find in the end know that it is a thing which is better left unseen. Yet he insists on seeking to shine the light of knowledge upon it and bring it to attention. It is interesting to note that after Oedipus has finally brought his crimes out into the open, and it is known to all what has transpired, Creon orders that the physical evidence of what has passed be removed from public sight out of respect for the sun, saying "revere The Sun whose light beholds and nurtures all. Leave not thus nakedly for all to gaze at A horror neither earth nor rain from heaven Nor light will suffer..." Even when horrid truth is made explicitly clear, those with wisdom prefer that it remain obscured. Oedipus' greatest foolishness consists in attempting to take that which ought to reside in the darkness of spiritual (which is to say unconscious and emotional) knowledge and forcing it out into the light of conscious day. From the moment he brings to light the truth, the remainder of the play is spent in trying to restore the truth to darkness.
In a futile attempt to send this truth back into the darkness from which it came, Oedipus blinds himself. He cries to his own eyes "No more shall ye behold such sights of woe...Henceforward quenched in darkness shall ye see Those ye should ne'er have seen." Oedipus seems to believe that if he blinds himself now, physically, he will somehow be able to restore his...
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