She is the goddess of love, fertility, and war, and in this case, she is becoming the war version of herself. Although in some parts of the story she is portrayed as an empathic goddess who is furious at Enlil for trying to hurt her people; her empathy is later contradicted. “Give me the Bull of Heaven or I will go to the underworld and break its door and let the hungry dead come to eat the living,” (Ferry 32). The quote displays the evil and harsh nature of the Gods, and the author is discouraging the readers from disobeying gods or a god. Ishtar was hugely unjust, and she decided to misuse her power as long as she could punish Gilgamesh and receive her revenge. She was not empathetic of the people that would be affected by the famine, or the splitting of the ground. Furthermore, there’s one major example that reinforces the theme of gods are
She is the goddess of love, fertility, and war, and in this case, she is becoming the war version of herself. Although in some parts of the story she is portrayed as an empathic goddess who is furious at Enlil for trying to hurt her people; her empathy is later contradicted. “Give me the Bull of Heaven or I will go to the underworld and break its door and let the hungry dead come to eat the living,” (Ferry 32). The quote displays the evil and harsh nature of the Gods, and the author is discouraging the readers from disobeying gods or a god. Ishtar was hugely unjust, and she decided to misuse her power as long as she could punish Gilgamesh and receive her revenge. She was not empathetic of the people that would be affected by the famine, or the splitting of the ground. Furthermore, there’s one major example that reinforces the theme of gods are