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The Epic of Gilgamesh

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Title: The Epic of Gilgamesh


1
The Epic of Gilgamesh
  • Timor mortis conturbat me
  • The fear of death consumes me
  • All of the episodes in the poem share this common
    theme--how the realization of death is a
    motivation for the heros actions and a defining
    feature of our search for identity.
  • The poem expresses a very pessimistic view of
    human life and the world--due in part to the
    insecurity of life in Mesopotamia.
  • From the start of the poem, we see Gilgamesh with
    an over-riding preoccupation with fame,
    reputation, and the revolt of mortal man against
    the laws of separation and death.
  • His 2/3 divinity yoked with his mortal third
    becomes an internal dilemma which drives much of
    the movement it is a conflict that lies at the
    heart of all mankind to reconcile our divine
    aspirations with our physical nature.

2
  • Gilgameshs completer, Enkidu, shares many of the
    heros traits, and he also stands as his
    opposite. Enkidus part-man, part-beast nature
    is the reverse of Gilgameshs human-divine mix.
  • The relationship of Gilgamesh and Enkidu is an
    essential element in Gilgameshs growth.
    Enkidus death is the primary motivational force
    that propels Gilgamesh on his journey for eternal
    life.
  • It is important to note that Gilgamesh sets out
    on his quest for SELFISH REASONS. He is not
    trying to revive Enkidu from the dead. Rather,
    he is now intimately aware of the consequences of
    death, and he wants to avoid a similar fate.

3
  • Gilgameshs journey is away from the center. He
    leaves civilization and enters the wilderness.
    Uruk is the seat of civilization and law.
    Entering the wilderness represents the movement
    away from what makes us human. In such,
    Gilgamesh regresses into a primal being, wearing
    lion skins and looking worn and weary.
    Paradoxically, in trying to gain everlasting
    life, he rejects the qualities that define what
    he should be--the King of Uruk
  • Gilgameshs journey is also a journey into the
    past. He figuratively travels back in time to
    encounter a man who lived before the Flood.
  • Most significantly, Gilgameshs journey is a
    journey into self. As a common archetypal
    pattern, Gilgamesh must lose all the trapping and
    symbols of his position in order to strip down to
    his essential self. That is his most harrowing
    test to face who he really is.
  • All of these patterns illustrate the growth of
    identity.

4
Prologue
  • Extols Gilgameshs traits accomplishments
  • Knowledge
  • Wisdom
  • Quest
  • Ability to Write
  • Divine/Human Composition
  • Grandeur of Urukparticularly its WALLS (p. 13)
  • The city represents safety, civilization, and
    law. The qualities of the King are reflected in
    the qualities of the city, and vice versa.

5
The Coming of Enkidu
  • Enkidu is Gilgameshs
  • Rival/ Companion
  • Alter Ego/Doppelganger
  • Reflector/Foil
  • Completer. The two heroes together form one
    unified whole.
  • Enkidus growth demonstrates the archetype of
    innocence leading to experience (often through
    sexual awareness). Wisdom replaces innocence.
    Civilization replaces the wild.
  • Enkidu proclaims, I have come to change the old
    order (pp. 15 17).
  • His interactions with Gilgamesh dissipate
    Gilgameshs selfish, hedonistic drives (p. 17).
  • Symbols to note
  • Face
  • Dreams
  • Clothing
  • Gates

6
The Forest Journey
  • This passage emphasizes how civilization
    overcomes the wilderness. How Law (the qualities
    of Mankind) replaces Chaos (the features of the
    Beast).
  • Also the domain of Humbaba is associated with
    evil (p. 18), giving Gilgameshs adventure a
    moral dimension. It is also blessed by the
    Sun-god, Shamash (p. 18).
  • The section also examines Mans restless desire
    (p.19) and his restless heart (p. 20). The
    hero must perform deeds to prove himself, and the
    deeds must be of epic size. This TEST is the
    hallmark of the hero.
  • Through these acts, the hero acquires personal
    Fame, which is very important to the earliest
    cultures, and he elevates the entire culture and
    human race. So both the individual and society
    profit from the contest.
  • Enkidu at first fears Humbaba because Enkidu has
    experience in the wilderness (pp. 18, 21, 23).
    But his companionship with Gilgamesh overcomes
    the dread, and they are able to vanquish the
    giant TOGETHER.

7
The Forest Journey
  • Gilgameshs heart is moved with compassion when
    Humbaba pleads to him (p. 24). Now Enkidu
    questions Gilgameshs judgment, and the two slay
    the Guardian of the Cedar Forest.
  • Although the heroes are aided by the Sun-god
    Shamash who supplies them with the winds, other
    gods are angered over the death of Humbaba.
    Enlil, the god of earth, wind and spirit, curses
    the pair (p. 25).
  • The gods do not like this New Cosmic Order that
    has been establish in which Man betters the
    Natural World.
  • Symbols to Note
  • Journey/Quest
  • The Forest
  • Faces
  • Dreams
  • Sleep
  • Gates
  • Test

8
Ishtar Gilgamesh
  • The goddess of fertility is attracted to
    Gilgamesh though his deeds. His Fame has
    consequences.
  • Ishtars advances are an honor--Gilgamesh will be
    taken into the cycle of renewal and be elevated
    even further, such as Dimuzi had been.
  • Yet, Gilgamesh refuses the offer which slights
    the goddess--the hero is always pushing the
    envelop, redefining Mans relationship with his
    surroundings, with the divine, and within the
    Cosmic Order.
  • Ishtar threatens the release of chaos (p.26), so
    the gods relent and give her the Bull of Heaven
    to punish Gilgamesh. Bulls are sacred animals in
    many Middle Eastern and Mediterranean cultures.
  • The killing of the Bull of Heaven and the
    subsequent insult to Ishtar is an affront to the
    divine--Man does have limits, as the epic proves
    over and over again. Enkidu is cursed, and his
    body (his defining feature and most mortal
    aspect) becomes his destruction.

9
The Death of Enkidu
  • Enkidus Dream of the Underworld is a frightening
    glimpse into the Sumerian Afterlife. This dark
    world inhabited by vampire-faced creatures where
    the dead are slaves who eat dust and clay reveals
    much about Sumerian existence since the stories
    of our Afterlife are based on our Earthly life.
  • Gilgameshs Lament (pp. 30-31) is formulaic and
    ritualistic.
  • At Enkidus death (p. 31) Gilgameshs anguish is
    unbounded (as is fitting the hero), and he begins
    his regression.
  • Symbols to Note
  • Dreams
  • Sleep
  • Gates
  • Clothing
  • The Worm

10
The Search for Everlasting Life
  • Gilgamesh sets out for purely selfish reasons (p.
    31).
  • His journey is a regression--a reverse of the
    evolution of man. His encounter with the pride
    of lions shows a primordial response to the
    natural world (31-32).
  • The Scorpion-Men, fitting guardians for the 12
    leagues of darkness under the Mountain of Mashu
    (a descent image), advise against the journey.
    Gilgamesh responds, still I must go (p.
    32)--life lessons have to be experiential.
  • Shamash begins a series of encounters in which
    everyone tells Gilgamesh essentially the same
    thing You will never find the life for which
    you are searching (p. 33). Remember, Shamash is
    the Sun-God, and he is distressed by
    Gilgameshs appearance, showing that there is
    something amiss with the heros adventure.

11
The Search for Everlasting Life
  • Siduri, the wine goddess who lives in an
    Eden-like Garden of the Gods, tells Gilgamesh to
    enjoy life--an early proponent of carpe diem
    (seize the day).
  • The passage over the Waters of Death is reverse
    birth images. The island is often a symbol of
    the womb, and as such, Gilgamesh is returning to
    a pre-birth state.
  • Urshanabi, the ferryman, is a common mythological
    figure to take people to a new reality--usually
    after death.
  • Utnapishtim, the Sumerian Noah, tells Gilgamesh
    the futility of his adventure after Gilgamesh
    asks the epic question how shall I find the
    life for which I am searching? (p. 36)
  • Symbols to Note
  • Darkness Blindness vs Light Sight
  • Ferryman
  • Water
  • Garden
  • The Island

12
The Story of the Flood
  • The story contains obvious parallels with the
    biblical Flood story. Yet, the actions and
    influence of the gods are quite different,
    indicating the different attitudes the Sumerians
    and Hebrews had toward the divine and our human
    responsibilities for our fate.
  • The Ark is an archetype of survival.
  • In both the Sumerian and biblical accounts, the
    destruction of the world is achieved through a
    reversal of the creation process, and chaos is
    loosed.
  • The greatest difference is in the end of the
    story. In the Bible, God and Noah (who represents
    all Mankind) are reconciled and form a covenant.
    In Gilgamesh, Mankind is still punished for his
    actions--these Sumerian gods are not forgiving
    deities.

13
The Return
  • The Test to stay awake. Human consciousness
    (identity) is an on-going theme within the poem.
    We often see Gilgamesh falling asleep (e.g. prior
    to the battle with Humbaba, and the test with the
    loaves of bread). This pattern illustrates the
    growth of mankind into a conscious ego. Yet, the
    human consciousness is still limited.
  • Once Gilgamesh fails the Test, he is sent to
    clean and renew himself (p. 40). He is re-born
    into a fully realized human being and is given
    clothing as a sign of his humanity. Gilgamesh
    has learned the limits imposed by our mortality.
  • The plant that restores youth--The Old Men Are
    Young Again--is not the same as immortality that
    has already been lost to us. This plant is a
    sort of consolation prize. Its importance lies
    in Gilgameshs altruism (pp. 40-41). He has
    gained wisdom instead of his original goal of
    immortality.
  • Of course, the snake--a suitable archetype of
    evil--steals even this prize.
  • On his return to Uruk, Gilgamesh is proud of his
    city, indicting the degree of his growth. The
    closing lines (p. 41) hearken back to the
    Prologue.
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