| 1053 55 Delphi, Olympia, Abai All holy shrines and the goal of religious pilgrimages.
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| 1063 the gods lose force Lit. ''the things pertaining to divinity slowly depart." Jocasta enters See my introduction.
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| 1117 search Pythian smoke Lit. "scrutinize the Pythian hearth."
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| 1144 great flood of light Lit. "great eye." Other uses of this metaphor in Greek literature suggest that a "great eye" was a sign of wonderful good hope or good luck.
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| 1168 unforgivable harm Lit. "Lest you receive a religious pollution from those who planted you."
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| 1231 Poor doomed child! See note on 1. 1001. Jocasta says to Oedipus that the only word she can call him is dystanos , the same word she gave to her child exposed and presumed dead. Jocasta has connected in her mind that child with Oedipus, and the same word is still appropriate. In his next speech Oedipus will disclaim all human mothering and claim Luck ( Tyche ) for his parent.
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| 1263 Pan A god holy to rural people, appropriate to events on Mt. Cithairon.
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| 1267 Hermes . . . Kyllene Like Pan, Hermes was a god well known to country people. Kyllene is a mountain in Arcadia, appropriate haunt of both Pan and Hermes.
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| 1302 Arcturus A star near the Big Dipper which, when it appeared in September, signaled the end of summer in Greece.
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| 1367 Your fate teaches Lit. "with your example (or "paradigm" paradigmos ) before us."
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| 1368
69 the story / god spoke Lit. "with your daimon
* before us." See my introduction.
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| 1375 76 who sang / . . . god's black oracle Lit. "singer of oracles." Presumably a reference to the Sphinx's riddles, but the word "oracle" usually refers to divinely sanctioned responses such as those given by Delphi. Sophocles may here be connecting the Sphinx to the other instances of divine intervention in Oedipus' life.
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