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    AC Benus
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
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The Great Mirror of Same-Sex Love - Prose - 104. "Gilgamesh leaves no son with his father"


What one needs to know first is that Gilgamesh was a bad king. The people cried for relief, and received it from the gods. The immortals created a perfect partner for Gilgamesh to tame him and raise his city state to greatness. This is the basic, irrefutable substance of the tale.

.

Gilgamesh and Enkidu 01 –

Abed Azrié’s performance and translation

 

 

Prologue:

[min. 2:40]

 

I want my country to know

Of one who has seen all things; [of]

He who was wise and knew of everything.

He who saw secret things

And disclosed what was hidden.

He who passed on to us a knowledge

Of days before the Flood. [He]

Went on a long journey,

Came back weary but serene.

He then engraved on a stone

The story of his labors.

He built the wall of Uruk –

The Enclosure, the abode

Of Anu and Ishtar –

The sacred of Enna.

 

Climb on the wall of Uruk

And examine well the brickwork.

See if it is not [fired] bricks;

The gods themselves [tempered] Gilgamesh.

Shamash, moreover,

Endowed him with fairness;

Adad, with courage.

 

 

Gilgamesh, the demigod

 

In him was two thirds god,

One third man, for none

Can bear the brunt of his arms.

The men in Uruk constantly

Stood in awe of him:

‘Gilgamesh leaves no son with his father,

Day or night his violence rage.

He who is the shepherd of Uruk,

He who is our shepherd leaves

No virgin to her lover,

Be it the daughter of a hero,

Or the promised maid

Of a simple warrior.

Day or night his violence rage.’

Their repeated lament reached

To the ears of the gods of heaven.

They appealed to Aruru, the goddess:

‘You made him, Aruru,

Now create his equal.

Let him be as stormy as he is;

Let them contend together,

And leave Uruk in quiet.’

Aruru conceived the image

Of Anu in her him mind.

She dipped her hands into water,

Took some clay, let it fall

In the wilderness and thus

Was created Enkidu, the hero

Creature of nightly silence,

[Of] Ninurta’s descent.

 

 

Enkidu, his beginning

 

He was hairy; the whole

Of his body was covered in hair.

[That atop his head] was like a woman’s:

His hair and [the] ears of grain looked alike.

He knew nothing of countries or people.

He was clad like Sumuqan;

He ate grass with the gazelle;

With the wild beasts,

He drank at the water[ing] hole. […]

—Abed Azrié,

from the March 2011

live performance at the

Institut du Monde Arabe

 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ARRP5i2nw8&t=631s

 

_

as noted
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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I have wanted to do pieces on the Epic of Gilgamesh for a long time. An early 1960s French work I have opened my eyes to the nature of this tale for what it is: a great love story. Not only is it the earliest story of any kind to survive in written form, it's clearly about the heroic struggle of one partner to search out and grant immortality to his beloved.

This being said, you will only find Gay-erasure comments concerning this heroic love story online. They -- the hets who don't want to "believe" it can be about Gay people, and demand that LGBTI2S+ folks today be kept from their own history at all costs -- must bend over backwards to convolute the simple words of the story itself. They do it to say, loudly (and ludicrously) "No! It's not about THAT."  To which all open minds must reply fuck em and their endless hatred.

In the posting above you have read the reasons Enkidu was created. This man, in Eve fashion, was created to be Gilgamesh's taming partner: his equal; his perfect soulmate; his lover. For as the narrative clearly states, Enkidu was meant to occupy Gilgamesh's time in bed so they would "contend together and leave [the sons and daughters of] Uruk in quiet."

The fact that this narrative predates the Adam and Eve story by thousands of years needs to be seriously considered when taking the (commonly supposed) creation story of mankind into consideration. At this point in my mind, the derivative nature of the later account in Genesis seems quite clear; however, one thing Adam and Eve are never said to possess is love. That is entirely in contrast to the hundreds of references concerning how much Gilgamesh and Enkidu love one another in the Epic of Gilgamesh.    

 

Edited by AC Benus
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2 minutes ago, ReaderPaul said:

I had to look up some references in this, @AC Benus.  Fascinating!

Thanks, ReaderPaul. Next I want to transcribe the chapter concerning Enkidu and Gilgamesh from the French book I mentioned above. Written by a psychologist, he nevertheless cuts through a ton of the BS out there on how this same-sex love story is not even 'gay' in the slightest. This is the BS you are 100% likely to encounter online today concerning this ancient male couple

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