As Creon took over the throne, it seemed like his mentality and the way he used his supremacy over the citizens of Athens changed periodically. Becoming king abruptly made it unmanageable for him to make a factual decision in every moment needed. During the conversation between Creon and Tiresias, the blind prophet, Creon is told that he fallaciously condemned Antigone: “O my son,
These are no trifles! Think: all men make mistakes,
But a good man yields when he knows his course is …show more content…
In defiance of Creon’s arbitrations, he went mediocre, which resulted in the death of close ones around him. In the quote, Creon explains that everyone makes mistakes, but people that are smart enough to know about their wrong doings can fix it. The fact that at the end he says “The only crime is pride” shows that although he knows that the actions he took were sinful, he blames his pride. This is ironic, because for someone that knows that his pride is taking over him and acknowledges it, he still chooses to do