Preview

The Sanctity of Oaths in Medea

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
398 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Sanctity of Oaths in Medea
Medea The Sanctity of Oaths Through the play Medea, Euripides shows us the importance of keeping a promise given. At the beginning of the story, we see the play’s two opposing views of promise keeping represented by the Nurse and the Tutor. As she stands outside of Medea’s house and laments the way Jason has slighted Medea by taking another wife, the Nurse speaks of the “eternal promise” Jason and Medea made to each other on their wedding day (17-21). The Nurse wishes Jason were dead for the way he has abandoned his wife and children, so strongly does she feel vows should not be broken (83). When the Tutor enters the scene, he expresses a much more cynical view regarding Jason’s decision to leave his wife. He asks the nurse, “Have you only just discovered / That everyone loves himself more than his neighbor? / Some have good reason, others get something out of it. / So Jason neglects his children for the new bride” (85-88). The Tutor feels that Jason’s leaving Medea is only a part of life, as “Old ties give place to new ones”. Jason "No longer has a feeling” for his family with Medea, so he leaves her to marry the princess who will bring him greater power (76-77). Medea is outraged that she sacrificed so much to help Jason, only to have him revoke his pledge to her for his own selfish gain. She asks him whether he thinks the gods whose names he swore by have ceased to rule, thereby allowing him to break his promise to her. Medea vows to avenge her suffering by destroying Jason’s new family and his children. When Jason curses his wife for her murdering at the end of the play, she says to him, “What heavenly power lends an ear / To a breaker of oaths, a deceiver?” (1366-1367) In this way, Medea lays the blame for all the evil she has done at the feet of Jason, for she never would have done these things if he had not betrayed his promise to her. Euripide’s

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    As the play opens, we hear Medea wailing in misery, “I…want to die…leaving behind this loathsome life.” Whether Medea is making an attempt to gain sympathy from the Chorus and the audience or she is genuinely in despair, it becomes apparent that Medea’s previous life with Jason was forged in circumstances of violence and betrayal, sowing the seeds for tragedy. The Nurse strings together a sad story of all Medea has done for the sake of Jason and their relationship, making us witnesses to how unjustly Medea has been treated. While Medea bears a sad history, Medea and the Nurse’s recount of the facts demonstrate how personally Medea has taken Jason’s actions, “I want you to die, along with your father.”…

    • 618 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Medea's Revenge Analysis

    • 990 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Her multitude of steps toward revenge shows just how elaborate and demented her plans are. Medea first starts with convincing King Creon to let her and her children stay one more day in order to prepare for exile. Medea never intended to use this day to prepare, for she used it to plan her revenge. Medea devised a plan to kill Creon’s daughter in order to make Jason suffer. Creon’s daughter is Jason’s new love interest, and her untimely death would leave Jason heartbroken. Medea also conceived a new procedure that involved the death of her own two children. She would kill her children in order to make Jason suffer and leave him with unimaginable grief. Medea needed to come up with a way to kill the princess without actually directly committing the act. She decides to use poisoned gifts that the princess could not refuse. Medea also undertook an escape plan in which she would flee to another city, and was promised to be safe there. She strikes this deal with Aegeus of Athens who promised Medea safety in his city in exchange for her to work her magic to help him with fertility issues. Medea must then commit the acts, and does so by sending in the poisoned gifts with her two children as a peace offering. The gifts not only kill the princess, but kill King Creon as well. She then kills her own children, and must plan a way to escape to Athens. Medea does this by flying away in a chariot pulled by dragons. These…

    • 990 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Medea is a woman in total control of her actions, and she is willing to kill even her own blood. She is not going to die without knowing that her ex-husband has paid for his disloyalty. Medea is angry and full of hate and she will not overestimate the price of her revenge, even if this price could be her own children. She shows this…

    • 1214 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Medea Feminist Analysis

    • 611 Words
    • 3 Pages

    However, they are incorrect because the Nurse and Chorus’s compassion is presented several times, where they try helping her and offering her advice. Medea, being the crazy woman she is, is considerably expected to behave in the manner she did. To take revenge against Jason, and in reference to killing the kids and new bride, Medea says, “To make you feel pain.” (p. 46) She is explaining how she wants to make him feel pain emotionally and mentally rather than physically. Jason says about himself at the end of the play, “...who will get no pleasure from my newly wedded love, /And the boys whom I begot and brought up, never/ Shall I speak to them alive. Oh, my life is over.” (p 44) It hurts Medea enormously that she killed her kids, but only did it for revenge. The Chorus, towards the end of the story, tries helping Medea and giving her advice, but she does not…

    • 611 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Furthermore, Medea takes offense to men having nothing to bind them to their commitments and women having to uphold to higher standards of commitment. In her eyes this is an injustice because whether it is a man leaving his wife, or a wife leaving her husband it only reflects negatively on the woman. She states “we women are the most wretched…we have bought a husband, we must then accept him as professor of our body… for women, divorce is not respectable; to repel the man, not possible” (24). From this statement we can tell that women are not afforded the same options as men, but still women are less respected if they do not act according to the social expectations of women. Jason leaving Medea not only subjects her to societies ridicule and shame, but a personal shame. The extent of her loyalty as went unappreciated and it results in her feeling used. Medea states, “Do you see how I am used- In spite of those great oaths I bound him with-By my accursed husband? Oh, may I see Jason and his bride ground to pieces in their shattered palace for the wrong they have dared to do to me, unprovoked! ” (22). In Medea's eyes his actions are a betrayal and her actions express those of vengeance. Has much as she has done for him she would have never thought that Jason would have shamed her in the way that he did. The idea that unexpected behavior leads to belittlement can be best expressed in Aristotle's, understanding of an insult, when he states, “if [a person] should have been expecting the opposite. For what is greatly unexpected is the more painful... From these considerations it should be clear what seasons, times, dispositions and ages are easily moved to anger… (144). Medea was not expecting Jason to dishonor her because she has fulfilled…

    • 356 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    On a superficial and simplistic level, the success of Medea 's course of revenge suggests that justice has been attained, as we witness the rightful downfall of Jason. Jason 's betrayal of Medea in the form of his abandonment, results in the breaking of the oath he pledged to Medea and the Gods. Thus, in adherence to the notion of divine justice, that the Gods will exact justice on those who commit unnatural deeds, Jason deserves a calamitous punishment for the breaking of this oath to the Gods and Medea, who "never did him wrong". Through achieving revenge on Jason in the most effective manner possible, via murdering their children and his wife, Medea inflicts this just punishment on Jason.…

    • 715 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Condemning Medea

    • 734 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In addition to the nurse as a witness, Jason also has something to contribute to Medea’s prosecution. Jason is the prime incendiary of the situation, the catalyst that sets into motion the events that would result in the deaths of four innocent people. He is the main cause of Medea’s rage, so naturally he can testify to Medea’s radical reaction to a commonplace event: him leaving her. When Medea accuses Jason of being a coward for marrying behind her back, he points out that “[even] if [he] had told [her] of it, [she still would be] incapable of…

    • 734 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    English Medea Essay

    • 878 Words
    • 4 Pages

    It is impulsive at the beginning of the play to feel sorry for Medea. The Nurse’s speech informs us of how arduous it was for Medea to come to Greece with Jason, on the Argo. She murdered her own father, King Pelias, as well as her brother and saved Jason from a serpent guarding the Golden Fleece, allowing him to escape. She betrayed her own people for Jason because she was ‘smitten with love’. Now that Jason is leaving her, she is just a simple foreigner living in Greece, seen as a woman of lower class to those born there. Medea cannot return to her homeland and, husbandless, she is disgraced. She cries that she has ‘no haven from this calamity’. When Jason first enters the play, he is confronted by Medea declaring all that she has done with him. Jason tells Medea that she should consider herself lucky and after being confronted, is quick to dismiss all of what Medea stated. Jason is convinced that it was thanks to Aphrodite, not Medea, that his life was spared on the Argo. He proclaims that she should be grateful to him for bringing her to a superior land.…

    • 878 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Jason left Medea for his new bride and new throne Medea was enraged. Medea immediately went seeking for revenge against Jason and his new bride. Medea gifts the new bride a beautiful gold dress and diadem sent by the children and the new bride dresses in her present. Euripides depicts Medea’s vengeance through her gifts and a messenger is sent to tell Medea what had happened. “The wreath of gold that was resting around her…

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Jason finally makes his appearance on stage, he still is not a likeable character. He is very arrogant, ignorant, and manipulative. He tries to persuade Medea that divorcing her and remarrying was actually benefiting both…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the play the Nurse says, “Jason has betrayed his sons and her, takes to bed a royal bride, Creon’s daughter.”(Euripides pg. 337) The text explains that Jason has left his two sons and Madea just to marry a princess. Jason left Medea because he said he will be able to have money to support his children, which is selfish because he can find other ways to get money. Medea also thinks Jason is being selfish and just wants a new wife because he was tired of her. A tragic hero has a tragic flaw, and Jason’s selfishness is his flaw because, after Madea learns what he’s going to do, he begins to lose…

    • 493 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the work prologue, we discover Jason 's quest to Colchis to obtain the Golden Fleece as a task created by his uncle, Pelias in order to claim his rightful inheritance. He assembles a team and they set sail for Colchis on the ship, the Argo. Upon reaching Colchis, King Aeetes instructs Jason to plow “a field with a team of fire-breathing bulls.” (Euripides 527). During his task, he meets King Aeetes ' daughter, Medea. Medea, proficient in magic, helps Jason. She helps him “plough the field, lull the dragon to sleep, steal the fleece, and escape back to Greece, killing her own brother to distract the attention of their enraged Colchian pursuers.” Jason and Medea go to Iolcus only to realize Pelias goes back on his word. Angered by this, Medea talks Pelias 's daughters into boiling him alive by telling them the act will make him immortal. The treacherous act forced Jason and Medea into exile. Jason and Medea marry, have children and move to Corinth. While in Corinth, Jason divorces Medea to marry the princess of Corinth. Because of the divorce, Medea 's spirit is destroyed and she is driven to an unstable state of mind.…

    • 1328 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Ancient Greek Gender Roles

    • 3135 Words
    • 13 Pages

    That being said, it is crucial to analyze the new perspective in order to formulate an educated theory on what Ancient Greek marital roles used to be. Jason and Medea are married with children when Jason chooses to suddenly leave to marry the daughter of the king of Corinth. Euripides is insinuating that in some instances male gender roles overpower their marital roles. As a Greek man it is his duty to gain honor and status as well as to create a family. However, as a Greek husband it is his duty to be devoted to his family and to never leave them. From this text we can infer that the desire of a man to achieve honor and status can lead some men to abandon their families. The prospect of one day being king is too much for Jason, he leaves and forgoes his marital roles. His choice to relieve himself of his duties as a husband infers that not all men in Ancient Greece were morally sound, taking a very loose interpretation of the word “honor.” Additionally, Medea involves herself in some actions that go against what would be considered socially…

    • 3135 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the play you can conclude that Jason is selfish, foolish, and does not care about others. For example, in the beginning of the play Jason says, “Have you only just discovered that everyone loves himself more than his neighbor?” (Dover 4). This statement shows his motives and how he is worried about himself and not about others. When Jason faces Medea and tells her that he left her for the good of the whole family, so that they could all become more powerful and wealthy it shows that he believes it is acceptable to leave his wife, he has no problem telling her, and doing it. Jason was thinking of himself when he left Medea to marry the daughter of Creon, King of Corinth. He was trying to get ahead as if a politician would try to get to the top.…

    • 996 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Medea And Heartbroken

    • 173 Words
    • 1 Page

    not care because all she wants is her husband. Jason soon realizes that Medea is…

    • 173 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays