Oedipus and Pentheus are both tragic Greek characters who help create their own endings. Through their character’s flaws and blindness to what is going on around each of them, the story develops. The only consistent character in both plays who is able to understand past and present dangers is Teiresias, the blind prophet. Oedipus thinks his human powers can match anything put in front of him. He forces other characters to tell him things, which again creates his tragic ending. (O790) Oedipus by not knowing his identity seems to create his own tragedy. Throughout the entire play, he is blind to everything people are telling him. (O320) He continues to badger Teiresias to answer things that Oedipus does not believe is true. If he only stopped, asking questions his fate might have been different. (O385) Because of these answers, he begins to suspect that people are plotting against him. He feels that he is above such lowly deeds. His own conceit and blind confidence in himself helps him continue towards a tragic ending. (O452-460) While Teiresias was predicting the future of Oedipus, he should have been smart enough to listen. He should have started to change his ways before he ended up destroying himself. Oedipus’ guilt was beginning to play tricks on his mind. At the beginning of the play, Oedipus was on the top of the mortal world. Now he is finding out the truth about his past and his world starts to crumble around him. (O805-830) When Oedipus comes upon a carriage with a man and his servants he lets his own ego get in his way. When either refuse to allow them to pass first, Oedipus kills all of them. His own stubbornness and pride again kept him from changing his future. Since this was his father he murdered, the myth continues. If he had just let them pass and gone his way, his future may have been altered. Pentheus like Oedipus was taken with his own powers. He could not believe anything could harm him. (B270) Pentheu...