OEDIPUS REX BY SOPHOCLES

At a feast, a drunken man maundering his cups
Cries out that I am not my father's son!
I contained myself that night, though I felt anger
And a sinking heart. The next day I visited 
My father and mother, and questioned them. They stormed,
Calling it all the slanderous rant of a fool;
And this relieved me.


At a feast, .......... this relieved me.

REFERENCE
(i) Drama: Oedipus Rex
(ii) Dramatist: Sophocles
CONTEXT
(i) Occurrence: Scene II (Lines 251-257)
(ii) Content: Thebes is struck by a plague and the oracle of Apollo says the sickness is the result of injustice: the old king's murderer still walks free. The blind seer Tiresias tells Oedipus that he is the murderer and is living incestuously. Jocasta says an oracle said her husband, the old king, would be killed by his child, but that never happened since they abandoned the baby and her husband was killed by robbers. Oedipus begins to suspect that he was the abandoned baby. A messenger and a servant confirm the tale. Jocasta hangs herself and Oedipus stabs out his own eyes. 
EXPLANATION
     In these lines Oedipus is conversing with his wife, Jocasta, and telling her a strange event of his youth in Corinth. He tells her that Polybos of Corinth is his father and his mother, Merope, is a Dorian. He was brought up to be the chief of Corinth. But a strange event turned the tables. A drunken man at a public feast proclaimed that he was not his father's biological son; he is an adaptation. He got furious at his maundering. However, he suppressed his anger that night though with a sinking heart. The very next day he went to his parents and questioned about the drunken man's allegations. They were offended, and said it was a foolish allegation. He was no longer feeling distressed or anxious; he was reassured by their words. However, he was not fully satisfied. In short, this particular event is the main cause that Oedipus left Corinth. 

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