ƓιƖgαмєѕн | Ƙιηg σf Hєяσєѕ (
kingofallkings) wrote2015-08-09 06:07 pm
Secret Garden❋
Secret Garden
Name: Gilgamesh
Height: 182cm/6'
Weight: 68kg
Three Sizes: B94/W73/H93
Home: Uruk
Birthday: Unclear
Weak Point: Do not ask what you already know
Fetishism: Naturally a beautiful form, no discussion is needed.
What do you look for in a partner? .......
What's your favorite color of underwear? What is there but gold!!!
How do you spend your free time? Pleasure trips.
Linchpin of Heaven: Something that denotes Gilgamesh's way of life. It signifies the ways of the ancient gods and his origins.
It is said that the gods of this universe are divided into two categories. Those that were always present and then became gods, and those that were reborn as gods. Those that were always present are the heavenly bodies, like the sun and moon, and natural phenomena, like storms and earthquakes, which were taken as objects of worship. Those that were reborn as gods were originally human, but for various reasons deviated from humanity and became objects of worship. Heroes and messiahs and systems crucial to prosperity fall into this category. The gods of Mesopotamia are of the former type. Natural phenomena with will and personality, they reigned as the law of heaven.
That which those gods sent out in order to remonstrate the people of the earth was Gilgamesh.
The Linchpin of Heaven. A king created by the gods in order to hold back the earth as it moved out of the era of the gods. However, he did not accept that duty. Placing his own desire above all else, he ruled his kingdom as a human being, and rejected the gods' ways as things of a bygone age.
"I will obey the gods. I will even honor them. But, you are ruined. As soon as I was born, you lost your throne."
Thus in ancient Uruk for the first time a king who broke with the gods was born. The King of Heroes, Gilgamesh. The king who was meant to be a linchpin in reality instead became the tip of the spear that would kill the former age.
Chains of Heaven: That which exemplifies Gilgamesh's childhood. It signifies a battle with a friend who was his equal, and that adventure. A story of worth unique in all the world, eternally unchanged.
Poison of Death: That which exemplifies Gilgamesh's youth. It expresses his pursuit of perpetual youth and eternal life and its circumstances. Thus, Gilgamesh's childhood ended.
The tyrant with neither blood nor tears.
A tyrant who sheds neither blood nor tears.
A hero who enjoyed and took to extremes every pleasure, and every treasure.
The king with the conviction to treat good and evil equally.
As the absolute basis is "himself," he had no sympathy for other ideologies and ways of life. Though on the point of vaingloriousness, he is the same as the Macedonian King of Conquerors, but the largest difference between the King of Heroes and the King of Conquerors is the point that "followers are unnecessary."
This is a hero who reigns alone from beginning to end. The things he loves are treasures and weapons, for people will only disappear. ...even if that proves just how much they deserve to be loved.
Considering the theme of "CCC," it's impossible to avoid questions regarding women. This is a digression, but Gilgamesh's preferred type is "a noble maiden (virgin)". It seems that "flowers that bloom in the wild" was his type during his childhood. It appears to dislike women who rely on men but are really using them.
Height: 182cm/6'
Weight: 68kg
Three Sizes: B94/W73/H93
Home: Uruk
Birthday: Unclear
Weak Point: Do not ask what you already know
Fetishism: Naturally a beautiful form, no discussion is needed.
What do you look for in a partner? .......
What's your favorite color of underwear? What is there but gold!!!
How do you spend your free time? Pleasure trips.
Linchpin of Heaven: Something that denotes Gilgamesh's way of life. It signifies the ways of the ancient gods and his origins.
It is said that the gods of this universe are divided into two categories. Those that were always present and then became gods, and those that were reborn as gods. Those that were always present are the heavenly bodies, like the sun and moon, and natural phenomena, like storms and earthquakes, which were taken as objects of worship. Those that were reborn as gods were originally human, but for various reasons deviated from humanity and became objects of worship. Heroes and messiahs and systems crucial to prosperity fall into this category. The gods of Mesopotamia are of the former type. Natural phenomena with will and personality, they reigned as the law of heaven.
That which those gods sent out in order to remonstrate the people of the earth was Gilgamesh.
The Linchpin of Heaven. A king created by the gods in order to hold back the earth as it moved out of the era of the gods. However, he did not accept that duty. Placing his own desire above all else, he ruled his kingdom as a human being, and rejected the gods' ways as things of a bygone age.
"I will obey the gods. I will even honor them. But, you are ruined. As soon as I was born, you lost your throne."
Thus in ancient Uruk for the first time a king who broke with the gods was born. The King of Heroes, Gilgamesh. The king who was meant to be a linchpin in reality instead became the tip of the spear that would kill the former age.
❋ ❋ ❋
Chains of Heaven: That which exemplifies Gilgamesh's childhood. It signifies a battle with a friend who was his equal, and that adventure. A story of worth unique in all the world, eternally unchanged.
❋ ❋ ❋
Poison of Death: That which exemplifies Gilgamesh's youth. It expresses his pursuit of perpetual youth and eternal life and its circumstances. Thus, Gilgamesh's childhood ended.
The tyrant with neither blood nor tears.
A tyrant who sheds neither blood nor tears.
A hero who enjoyed and took to extremes every pleasure, and every treasure.
The king with the conviction to treat good and evil equally.
As the absolute basis is "himself," he had no sympathy for other ideologies and ways of life. Though on the point of vaingloriousness, he is the same as the Macedonian King of Conquerors, but the largest difference between the King of Heroes and the King of Conquerors is the point that "followers are unnecessary."
This is a hero who reigns alone from beginning to end. The things he loves are treasures and weapons, for people will only disappear. ...even if that proves just how much they deserve to be loved.
Considering the theme of "CCC," it's impossible to avoid questions regarding women. This is a digression, but Gilgamesh's preferred type is "a noble maiden (virgin)". It seems that "flowers that bloom in the wild" was his type during his childhood. It appears to dislike women who rely on men but are really using them.
