preview

Odysseus Or Gilgamesh - Will The Real Epic Hero Please Stand Up?

Decent Essays

Odysseus or Gilgamesh - Will the real Epic Hero please stand up?
“Gilgamesh went to the entrance into the mountain and entered the darkness alone, without a companion. By the time he reached the end of the first league the darkness was total, nothing behind or before. He made his way, companionless, to the end” (Book 9 p. 51, The Epic of Gilgamesh). In The Epic of Gilgamesh, an epic poem translated by N.K. Sanders, Gilgamesh is a character who is by all accounts an epic hero. As a person of nobility, he becomes tyrannical and overpowering in his strength, until the gods present him with a challenge- an equal counterpart to Gilgamesh’s fortitude. Gilgamesh battles with this new encountered foe, named Enkidu, yet because of their equivalent vitality, they end up cancelling each other out, and through a twist of events, Gilgamesh befriends Enkidu. This friendship is everlasting, through thick and thin. After Enkidu’s death and traveling in search for an answer to life’s cruelty and abandonment, Gilgamesh finds a new perspective on life and returns home to his rightful place on the throne. The Epic of Gilgamesh entails the hardships and retribution that the main character, Gilgamesh, ⅔ god and ⅓ human and King of Uruk, endures. Comparatively, Gilgamesh is more of an epic hero than Odysseus from The Odyssey by Homer, whose story also follows the structure of the Epic Hero Cycle. This is because Gilgamesh embarks on multiple epic journeys, and on the way, grows and learns from his

Get Access