Teiresias and Theoklymenos
Teiresias is a blind prophet who Odysseus seeks for help in the underworld in "The Odyssey" by Homer. Because Teiresias is blind, he has 'inner sight', and can see things others cannot, such as the future.
the way home will be filled with troubled.
Teiresias is a blind prophet who is able to recognize Odysseus even before drinking of the sheep's blood. He has the power of prophecy, even while dead.
some are -athena -helios -calyspo -zeus -hermes -scylla -polyphemus(cyclopes) -poesdion -circe -teiresias
A blind prophet who warns of perils ahead in Odysseus' attempt to get back home is who Teiresias is in "The Odyssey" by Homer (fl. sometime between 12th and 9th centuries B.C.E.).Specifically, Teiresias is the long-lived, blind seer who serves all Theban kings since the founding of Thebes by Cadmus, first king and grandson of the sea god Poseidon. He is dead by the end of the Trojan War and lives out the afterlife in the Underworld. Odysseus visits him there to anticipate challenges in his attempt to get back to his wife Penelope. Teiresias particularly warns Odysseus against eating the cattle of the sun god Helios. But when Odysseus subsequently lands on the sun god's sacred island of Thrinacia, his men disobey, his ship is destroyed by Zeus' lightning bolt, and all of his men are killed.
Odysseus, Penelope, Athena, Telemachus, Polyphemus, Poseiden, Sirens, Calypso, Hermes, King Alcinous, Circe, Aeolis, Helios, Teiresias, Scylla, Charybdis, Eurylochus, Zeus, the suitors, Eurymachus, Antinous
Teiresias does no such thing. He tells Odysseus all he needs to know.
Bully, insult, malign and reject is what Oedipus does to Teiresias in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Oedipus bullies Teiresias into saying what only serves to upset him and his quick temper. He insults Teiresias by calling him a criminal, a fake and a liar. He rejects what Teiresias says and dismisses him unceremoniously. He sustains his anger by maligning Teiresias to the chorus leader, Creon, and Jocasta.
Odysseus would like the blind prophet Teiresias to tell him how to get home safely.
That Teiresias is a participant if not the perpetrator of Laius' murder is the way in which Oedipus feels when Teiresias does not give him the desired information in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Oedipus asks Teiresias the blind prophet for help in identifying King Laius' killer. Teiresias begs to leave. Oedipus decides that Teiresias himself must be involved in the killing.
That Teiresias accuses him of being the killer is the reason why Oedipus does not believe Teiresias in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Oedipus asks Teiresias for help in solving the mysterious murder of King Laius. Teiresias the blind prophet astounds Oedipus by identifying him as the very killer that all Thebes seeks. Oedipus does not remember meeting the man that Teiresias accuses him of killing.