Oedipus’s tragic flaw is ignorance which he demonstrates throughout most of the tale. Oedipus is talking to the blind prophet who discreetly tells Oedipus that he is the man who killed the previous king. Oedipus who does not believe the prophet claims: “Oh, truth has strength, but you have none. You have blind eyes, blind ears, and a blind brain.”(718). His tragic flaw makes him the truly blind person talking only in ignorance. However his tragic flaw ignorance is not the only characteristic makes Oedipus a tragic hero. …show more content…
The welfare of the people and the land that he owns starts to change drastically as they suffer the backlash of his fate. The tale of Oedipus starts off with him and the priest talking about the kingdom: “Plague blackens our flowering farmland, sickens our cattle where they graze. Our women in labor give birth to nothing.”(708). Oedipus brings misfortune unknowingly to his kingdom due to his presence alone. Therefore a tragic flaw and misfortune of a kingdom gives another point to Oedipus possessing traits of a tragic