A legendary Mesopotamian epic recounts the deeds of a semi-divine hero whose close companion's death prompts a quest confronting mortality. Episodes include dangerous journeys, battles with supernatural foes, a journey to meet a survivor of a great flood, and counsel that offers pragmatic comfort. The surviving old Babylonian fragments preserve adventures, a seaside woman's advice urging fleeting pleasures, and didactic appendices reflecting temple-school theology. Composed in multiple tablet-sized sections and transmitted through Sumerian and Akkadian versions, the poem weaves themes of friendship, the limits of human striving, ritual care for the dead, and the search for lasting fame and understanding of death.