Enkidu character
Enkidu character 1-698
The hunter went on to tell Gilgamesh that there is a strange man who came down from the highlands. He is the strongest in the country and very powerful. He is as powerful as Azam Anu. He roams the steppes and eats grass. He grazes pastures with wild animals and waters with them at the water source. So Gilgamesh advised the hunter to take with him a woman who would try to attract him with her charms, until she made him fall, and then the wild animals would move away from him. So the hunter took the woman and went to the water source, and they waited for Enkidu until he arrived. Then the woman appeared to him and tempted him, saying that you are beautiful, Enkidu, like a god, so why do you roam the wilderness with the animals? ? Come, I will take you to Uruk. Enkidu was convinced, so he went with her to the city and she taught him how to dress and live like a human being among the people, and how to eat bread and drink strong liquor. Enkidu took his weapon and went chasing lions and hunting wolves to comfort the shepherds.
When she spoke to him about Gilgamesh, who he believed to be the strongest of men, Enkidu said to her: I would like to wrestle with him. In fact, Enkidu went to the city and wrestled with Gilgamesh until they demolished the threshold, smashed the doorpost, and shook the wall. Although Gilgamesh was victorious in the end, he confessed his strength. Enkidu, and the two embraced and became friends.
The global character of Tarzan is considered to be based on the character of Enkidu
The Epic of Gilgamesh reveals man's advanced thinking and his overwhelming desire to cling to life. Among the letters of its writer is that good is stronger than evil within man, and therefore Gilgamesh’s good inclination prevailed when he obtained the plant of immortality. He did not keep it for himself, but rather said, “I will carry it to Uruk and make the people eat it.” Before that, Gilgamesh, who represents evil, accompanied Enkidu, who represented good, despite his victory over him, and they turned into a powerful force. The writer defeated the will of the “artificial” gods by killing the genie of the cedar forest and the winged bull.
There is another message stating the absolute truth of death for man, and Gilgamesh’s failure, despite his intense struggle and going through horrors, to change his inevitable human fate, as he is partly human, ending with a calm feeling of surrender to this truth.


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