Blake Strider’s Reviews > The Epic of Gilgamesh > Status Update

Blake Strider
Blake Strider is on page 8 of 72
Again, this is very interesting. Gilgamesh leaves to go rape a newlywed woman, and Enkidu - the beast man from the wilderness, raised by a prostitute and shepherds - blocks Gilgamesh from entering. Gilgamesh claims divine right of kings, but Enkidu is the Gods attempt to humble Gilgamesh. But also interesting is that all Gilgamesh needed was to meet his match. Right here, the grapple at the doorway and they’re bffs
Mar 21, 2026 04:42AM
The Epic of Gilgamesh

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Blake Strider
Blake Strider is on page 8 of 72
Third: of all the translations I’ve read of Sumerian work - not that much tbh - I’ve noticed that they write in, like, a circular pattern? Dialogue, in particular. Gilgamesh relays his dream to his mother, who rephrases his statements back in her answers, and it’s CONSTANT. I wonder why they wrote like that.
Fourth: the harlot that civilizes Enkidu is interesting as well; prostitution was a religious practice.
Mar 21, 2026 04:37AM
The Epic of Gilgamesh


Blake Strider
Blake Strider is on page 8 of 72
First: the translator includes a description of Nisaba as the goddess of corn. Why? Everything I’ve read has described her as a goddess of GRAIN, specifically. Corn didn’t exist in Mesopotamia 5 thousand years ago. Am I missing something?
Second: interesting how the story sets up Gilgamesh as the villain right away. Enkidu is a savior of the people, a “hero” by their own words. Gilgamesh is a rapist.
Mar 21, 2026 04:32AM
The Epic of Gilgamesh


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