Vocabulary
Events 1
Events 2
Events 3
Relation/Chorus
100

What is the best example of a decree you might hear in court? 

a. a judge's final ruling of a trial

b. a defendant's plea of innocence

c. a lawyer's argument in defense of a client

d. a lawyer's objection to a witness's testimony

a. a judge's final ruling of a trial

100

What danger threatens the city of Thebes? 

a. an epidemic of the plague

b. a large-scale economic crisis

c. an invasion by an enemy army

d. a severe and long-lasting drought

 

a. an epidemic of the plague

100

Which is the most reasonable inference to draw about what kind of king Oedipus is? 

a. responsible and considerate

b. mysterious and secretive

c. charming and talented

d. fierce and terrifying

a. responsible and considerate

100

According to the ode sung after the Oedipus-Teiresias episode in Part I, what does the chorus believe will eventually happen in Thebes?

a. That Thebes will be divided by a bitter civil war

b. That Teiresias will recover his sight and confess.

c. That Apollo will eventually reveal the murderer.

d. That the oracle told Creon the murderer's name. 

c. That Apollo will eventually reveal the murderer.

100

What are the three parts of a Chorus?

1. Strophe

2. Antistrophe

3. Epode

200

If a respected king gave new edicts to his loyal subjects, how would his subjects most likely respond to them? 

a. They would adopt them

b. They would ignore them

c. They would challenge them

d. They would keep them a secret

a. They would adopt them

200

What instructions does Creon receive from the oracle?

a. Thebes must build a new temple to Apollo

b. Thebes must punish the murderer of Laius

c. Thebes must solve the riddle of the Sphinx

d. Thebes must make a sacrifice to the oracle

b. Thebes must punish the murderer of Laius

200

Which of the following lines shows that Oedipus is responsible and considerate?

a. Oedipus. "Tell me what is troubling you./.../...Never doubt that I will help you in every way I can.

b. Priest. "My lord we are plunged into darkness. Death alone grows fat upon our agony."

c. Priest. "When no men throng the streets, the city walls are nothing and our proud ships mere empty shells."

d. Creon. Do you wish me to speak in public in front of all these men? I will of course."

a. Oedipus. "Tell me what is troubling you./.../...Never doubt that I will help you in every way I can.

200

Which best characterizes Creon's response when Oedipus accuses him of planning to usurp the throne?

a. Creon challenges Oedipus to an all-out fight for the crown.

b. Creon admits that he is guilty of plotting to take the throne.

c. Creon laughs at Oedipus' accusation and refuses to discuss it.

d. Creon explains reasonably why Oedipus is wrong to accuse him.

d. Creon explains reasonably why Oedipus is wrong to accuse him.

200

How is Creon related to King Oedipus?

Creon is his brother-in-law.

300

Which of the following situations best illustrates the meaning of proclamation?

a. a priest raising an olive branch to the sun

b. a large crowd cheering for a king

c. a queen giving a speech

d. a man listening to advice

c. a queen giving a speech

300

When Teiresias appears before Oedipus, what claims does he state? (Choose two)

a. He claims that the oracle has not spoken truly.

b. He claims that Oedipus caused his blindness.

c. He claims that Creon ordered him to speak.

d. He claims that Laius was Oedipus' father.

e. He claims that Oedipus murdered Laius.

d. He claims that Laius was Oedipus' father.

e. He claims that Oedipus murdered Laius.

300

When Teiresias accuses Oedipus in Oedipus the King, Part I, Oedipus immediately assumes, without evidence, that he and Creon are traitors. Given the details of the play up to this point, what is the most likely reason Oedipus is so quick to accuse the others?

a. Teiresias is an old blind man who has lost his ability to see the future.

b. Oedipus knows that he is guilty as charged and tries to cover up with bluster.

c. Creon is more popular in Thebes than Oedipus and would make a better king.

d. Oedipus cannot face the idea that he might have committed such a repulsive crime.

d. Oedipus cannot face the idea that he might have committed such a repulsive crime.

300

Which of the following lines of dialogue best supports that Creon explains reasonably why Oedipus is wrong to accuse him?

a. Creon. But if I were king I would have to do things which I did not want./So why should I seek the crown...?

b. Creon. In time you will know the truth.../.../A wicked man is discovered in the passing light of a single day.

c. Creon. No! Let me die amongst the damned if I ever wished you harm!

d. Creon. Over nothing? You are wrong, my sister./Your husband will send me into exile or to my death. 

a. Creon. But if I were king I would have to do things which I did not want./So why should I seek the crown...?

300

Who does Oedipus send to speak with Apollo?

Teiresias

400

Which is the best definition of the Latin root -dict-?

a. to rule or lead

b. to say or speak

c. to argue or quarrel

d. to move or gesture

b. to say or speak

400

What causes the quarrel between Creon and Oedipus?

a. Creon believes that Oedipus is a bad husband to Jocasta.

b. Oedipus knows that Creon never went to see the oracle.

c. Oedipus believes Creon wants to seize the throne. 

d. Creon recognizes Oedipus as the killer of Laius.

c. Oedipus believes Creon wants to seize the throne.

400

Oedipus asks Teiresias for guidance and help to find the murderer of Laius. Teiresias replies,"Alas! It is a miserable thing to be wise when wisdom brings no reward." Which best explains Teiresias' meaning?

a. He believes that identifying the murderer will only make matters worse for everyone.

b. He does not want to reveal the murderer's name unless he is promised a handsome payment.

c. He hopes to conceal the loss of his wisdom by refusing to tell Oedipus who the murderer is. 

d. He no longer remembers the name of the murderer but does not want to lose a reward by admitting it. 

a. He believes that identifying the murderer will only make matters worse for everyone.

400

Which best describes the mood of the chorus in the ode that follows the Oedipus-Teiresias episode of Part I?

a. furious at Teiresias' accusations and calling for his execution

b. suspicious of Oedipus' bluster and insisting he confess the truth

c. distressed at Teiresias' revelations and uncertain what to do next

d. confident that Oedipus will calm down and hopeful for a swift resolution

c. distressed at Teiresias' revelations and uncertain what to do next

400

List the parts of a plot diagram in order. There are 5.

1. Introduction

2. Rising Action

3. Climax

4. Falling Action

5. Resolution

500

Given your knowledge of the Latin root -dict-, which human ability does the skill of diction most likely focus on?

a. seeing

b. hearing

c. thinking

d. speaking

d. speaking

500

Jocasta tells Oedipus what she knows about Laius' murder. Which incident in her story does Oedipus recognize as an action he carried out in his own past?

a. the beating of one servant who later left Thebes

b. the murder of the man he believed to be his father

c. the encounter with highwaymen when he was traveling

d. the murder of a group of men at a junction of three roads

d. the murder of a group of men at a junction of three roads

500

Oedipus the King, Part I, ends in a long episode for Oedipus and Jocasta. What does their conversation in this episode most clearly reveal about their relationship?

a. They are both afraid of saying what they really think.

b. They offer each other comfort and exchange confidences.

c. They argue fiercely over Creon.

d. They keep important secrets from one another.

b. They offer each other comfort and exchange confidences.

500

Which of the following lines from the ode best supports the mood that the chorus is confident that Oedipus will calm down and is hopeful for a swift resolution?

a. Chorus. Who is this man of unspeakable darkness?/He must fly like the wind's swift steeds./For on his heels Apollo races/In the blinding light of his father's fire.

b. Chorus. Find the killer. Find the man who roams/Like a bull in the forest's shadow,/Raging in the haunting dark as his doom hovers,/Ready to strike.

c. Chorus. The man skilled in the beating of the wings of birds/Troubles me deeply. Is there truth in his art?/I am lost. I have no words. I can see neither/Past nor future.

d. Chorus. There was no quarrel ever that I knew/Between our royal house and Polybus, father of our king./There is no proof.

c. Chorus. The man skilled in the beating of the wings of birds/Troubles me deeply. Is there truth in his art?/I am lost. I have no words. I can see neither/Past nor future.

500

Explain Jocasta's relationships with the following people...

1. Creon

2. King Laius

3. Oedipus

1. brother

2. deceased husband

3. current husband