Showing posts with label hieroglyphs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hieroglyphs. Show all posts

Friday 1 May 2020

1990 Egypt II: Luxor, Aswan, Abu Simbel

22.2.90 Luxor

Classic early morning sunrise – or what I take to be one.  Durrell's nacreous sky, with palm trees silhouetted against it.  Cloudy, textured sky, the Nile not visible.  Apparently the train is to arrive on time at about 7am – for the first time (ever?).  Still no breakfast.  The sunrise turned from rosy haze to the dark red eye of Re – huge and monstrous – then soon turned yellow, then white.  The sun does seem a very basic fact already.  The north-south dividing line of the Nile probably helped in the sense of journey, of rising and falling, of a mid-point, of cycles.  Inevitable that in this land of the sun it should dominate.  The clouds burn off.

Off the train, to the Savoy Hotel and – they have a room, or a bungalow at least, although I haven't seen it yet, and can't until noon.  So, off for a wander.  Along the Nile corniche.  Magnificent view across to the Valley of the Kings; I can imagine it does get very hot.  Weakly, I am now sitting in Luxor – I should wait, but who could resist?  I am trying not to "do" it now, just be.  My legs are amazingly tired.

One thing: I feel my interest in the Savoy Hotel was piqued by old van Haag's references to it.  This convinces me that a more personalised kind of travel guide/book can succeed. Remember that the exhibits of most museums are the spoils of war/conquests of empire: the Rosetta Stone, for example, passing from France to the British Museum.  Note if English were written without vowels – phtgrphr – there would be little loss – mostly neutral vowels.  Ancient Egyptian may have been simplified because of collapse from proto-ancient Egyptian – like English.

At the end of the Avenue of Sphinxes – no tourists; just the muezzin.  The obsessiveness of the builders of them.  The pylon at the end, massive still, the obelisk, the Ramses statues (the bloody flies, ho-hum).  The colonnade beyond.  

Now on the hotel's terrace beside the Nile – windy, the sun hotter than it seems – fearing a hot time.  My room good – not facing the Nile, but south facing around the pool – looks tempting. Everything else usual tacky/non-functioning.  Back to the Luxor temple – not Karnak as I erroneously thought, making my task here long.  I see now that early morning is the best for reading the Battle of Kadesh – of which I have the transcription.  Old Greek graffiti abound.  In the first court I have a sense of how it must have looked when complete.  Beautiful papyrus columns, calyx tops.  

After lunch – if that was a goulash, I'm a Chinaman – out to Karnak, hiring a hantour for E£5 (shades of Andy Warhol).  How to formulate an adequate response to this place?  I made no attempt to write while I was there – it was enough of a job orienting myself.  The first pylon pretty damn impressive.  Indeed I was struck throughout by a sense of awe that mere mortals must always have felt upon seeing these godly works.  They make Stonehenge look pretty sick.  [Ah – Turkish coffee – yummy.]  The forecourt too: I could reconstruct the Kiosk of Taharqa with its huge swooping columns.  It must have acted as a huge visual brake.  The triple shrine of Seti II was interesting – if only because of the thoroughness with which the first hieroglyphs – Set – had been erased.  Bad vibes re Osiris?

The Temple of Ramesses III, though small, was powerful.  The famous Bubastite Portal a nice reminder of synchronous events – [The sun has turned gold, Re on his way down.  Fragrances in the air, the birds' dusk chorus.  Liquid yellow now.] – Shoshenq I's victories over the Palestinians – Rehoboam, son of Solomon. 

An orange tincture now. In the after image, I have hundreds of Res in my eye/retina.  The west bank looks like a Cadbury's Flake – I'm sorry, but it does.  Another Turkish coffee… For some reason, there is something about the sinking sun that reminds me of Peter Greenaway… - very European.  The first pinks in the evening air; birds going nuts.  Perhaps peach-coloured now; an artist [Monet] could study the effects for years. Re is slipping behind the hills, changing boats for his nightly voyage – as Thoth?/moon – it's all so confusing….  Red leaking out along the horizon, an unlookable-at segment.  Re is dead.  Feluccas serene on the Nile – I must try one… A falcon hovering low over the river – no wonder they took it for a god – Horus, too.  No spectacular sunset further, alas.

On the way to Karnak – probably a 15 minute walk – I could make out Hatshepsut's mortuary complex across the Nile: looks pretty damn good.  I could also see a few pylons – modern ones… The cab driver beat his poor nag occasionally; my moderations to little effect.  No baksheesh.  Perhaps I'm unfair.  [Parenthetically, try as I might, I could not find Rimbaud's graffiti; annoying.]  The Nile very beautiful at dusk, the golden-pink sky reflected in its waters like a sheet of silver.

Now at dinner – seem to be mostly French and Germans here – few Brits, Yanks or Ozzies.  So back to my day at Karnak.  The hypostyle hall is one of the most impressive things in its sheer massiveness. And still those words.  It is so hard for us to look at these buildings in the right way.  For the literate, every surface would have been alive, a huge billboard, with the king's name shouted, shouted, shouted.  Perhaps Piccadilly Circus or Japanese cities with their neon lights, Las Vegas, are the only equivalents.  Our ads the same: except we habituate to those, and many are ugly.  Here words use pictures too – a unique fusion - and are mixed with literalistic portrayals. For the uneducated, this double nature must have come through: they were recognisable images, and yet magic – words – too, but mysteries.  Perhaps some could have been spelt out – the obvious transliterations.  But otherwise it could only have increased the oppressiveness of the ensemble, emphasising the distance between gods and men.  In a sense these huge structures justified themselves, praising the godhead that was invoked for their construction.

Moving among the papyrus pillars – papyrus again the foundation for their architecture, as for their later writing and ultimate heritage – I felt a pygmy, wandering among a huge bed of papyrus stalks.  The fact that the central rows were roofed must have gob-smacked the proles, as the clerestories would have done.  Their surfaces covered with large, rather crude hieroglyphs, the walls too.  The perspective varies, constantly shifts as I shifted, a vision of eternity and infinity.

Perhaps the obelisks are appropriate, the only possible follow up.  Hatshepsut's is soaring, a simple inscription – plus the Sut health warning at the bottom, staking a claim: "I built this, O ye of the future".  Interesting effect that things get smaller as you go in – typically Western art tries to cap what goes before sequentially.  Here you feel that you are entering the inner sanctum – like the heart of the pyramid.  It is very effective, not at all an anti-climax.  More smiting of heathens – lists of the battle of Megiddo – Armageddon. Again, that shock of recognition, of ancient knowledge crystallising as reality on the face of a rock.

I forgot to mention: the colours on the upper parts of the columns and links in the hypostyle hall.  At several points colours survive – noticeably in the wall of Hatshepsut – colours 3000 years old.  We see the surfaces as covered in pictorial scratches: in fact, they would have been blazes of strong colours – red, green, blues, blacks – another instance of our misreading, our wilful misapprehension of the reality. [Parenthetically, it is rather neat that Ryman's have already entitled this book "Ruled".]  The size and single-mindedness of the design, the central axis, are noteworthy.  [I am trouble by a trifle: I cannot remember what or where the hotel was in Jodhpur.  I can remember the fort, the market, the museum – but not the hotel.  Hmm…] 

23.2.90 Luxor, west bank

Up at 5.30am, the Nile misty.  Down to the public ferry (20 Egyptian piasters) – a cold crossing. Then I hire a bike for E£8.  To the ticket office to buy around 10 tickets (ever the optimist).  Riding through the lush countryside, the air cool, the sky clear blue, reminds me of Nepal.  Hot air balloons circle overhead.  Long, long, ride – hard work on the still sore quads.  But worth it.  I pass the Colossi of Memnon, solitary, shattered guardians.  Signs to other antiquities, but I have only one goal: Hatshepsut, where I now sit, facing this extraordinary (albeit reconstructed) building, and its even more extraordinary (unreconstructed) backdrop.  

I take a shortcut across a moonscape of rubble and holes.  Then it all hove into sight.  The huge yellow-grey curtain of rock, shaped as if statues were emerging from it.  Below, the strata of rock; then rubble.  To the first colonnade.  Nice pic of Hatshepsut's obelisk being transported – a bigger boat than I've seen represented elsewhere.  I also find unexpectedly, but perhaps unsurprisingly, the cartouche of Ramses II.

Up the ramp.  This is the first Egyptian place that used the third dimension – Karnak is stupendous, but all two-dimensional; this is stupendous in a more developed way.  Nice to see Anubis getting a chapel for a change.  Birth room not as good as at Karnak.  I saw the most appalling thing: this bloody Frenchman first rubbed a coloured hieroglyph, and when that proved insufficient, then licked his finger and rubbed.  Bastard.  Hathor temple good; Hathor head very archaic – like the Narmer tablet.  Lots and lots of tourists now it's Ramadan.  Punt reliefs a little anti-climactic.  Best thing is the overall concept and setting; that wall…

The tomb of Ramose - lovely creamy-white stone, fine reliefs – full of life and its joys.  Tomb of Nakht – beautiful, intimate, his glorious wife "chantress of Amun" – the famous singing girls – so casually sensual.  High in the hills among the Tombs of the Nobles.  Looking for Sennefer.  But the view is great – I can understand the village and tombs better – also see the alluvial plain stop dead, sand all around.  The sun is high.  A haze hangs over Luxor.  This place is just honeycombed with openings of tombs.

I find it hard dealing with all the touts and trish-trash pushers – the tiny kids trying to sell their crummy dolls, or else a foreign coin.  A tiny sum to me is a huge sum to them; one hit per day could make all the difference. But it would become impossible.

I sit now in the Ramesseum, in the shade of one of the standing Ramses.  Deep and cool – I am dreaming of my Turkish coffee back at the Savoy already.  The tombs are fascinating for their (post facto) integration into the village.  A pit, a door, a tomb.  The weather is perfect: the air cool enough to wear a jacket and long trousers. The ground is so white here – and so friable.  One of the nice things about hieroglyphs is that as the sun swings around, the etched lines change according to where the shadow falls.  At this moment, I sit by the throne that Belzoni (1816) inscribed; the relief of Thoth, old Ibis-head himself, is beautifully clear. 

I like the Ramesseum.  Partly because it has a very personal feel to it – here, all the cartouches and images of Ramses II make sense.  Also its forlornness, its failure in the face of time – Ozymandias and all that (it is a superb piece of statuary – or was once).  I suppose too the proportions are right: first pylon (Kadesh again), second pylon (ditto), the Osiris pillars, the great hypostyle hall.  Nice to see it covered, it gives a good feel for the earlier actuality of it.  The papyrus columns mostly with their two types of capitals, are very elegant.  Trees too – junipers (?) - lend pleasant shade and scents – and of course the setting: the great amphitheatre of the hills.

It's funny how a famous graffito – Belzoni, Rimbaud – redeems itself; perhaps I should leave one…. The blue of the sky is unreal: hard and unbroken.  It leeches the colours out of everything else, stones especially.  Mosques with the Koran, a cathedral with words, are the nearest equivalent to these real books in stone.

Valley of the Queens – hot and desolate – real desert, and doubtless a foretaste of the Valley of the Kings.  Prince Khaemwaset II – vibrant colours, such clarity and confidence of form.  Queen Tyti less exciting – quite faded.  This should remind me again how multicoloured all the temples would have been – huge orgies of colour.

In front of the massive first pylon of Ramses III temple.  The hieroglyphs like a shimmering chattering, a sheet of mysteries.  The initial impulse behind all these temples was to keep the king alive: because he was the nation – keep him alive, keep the nation alive.  Alongside the Colossi of Memnon.  Shattered, faceless images, watching nonetheless.  The constant backdrop of the hills.  They look crippled; one is covered in gaudy red and blue scaffolding, the colour of hieroglyphs.  

[Note: the marks on the cover of this book: they can also be found on my Nepal notebook and for the same reasons.  They come from the back wheel carrier clamp on the bike – a necessary adjunct to travel, since my perfected equipment has at its heart a Samsonite carrying bag.]

One of the pleasures of travelling is establishing miniature routines.  They offer a double delight: that of familiarity, of safety, and of a paradoxical novelty – these are not real routines.  For me, these often centre around tea – for example, at Pokhara, at the Imperial Hotel in Delhi, and now here, in Luxor.  I am on the patio of the Savoy, the dying sun blah-blah-blah, waiting with trepidation for my (first) Turkish coffee.  This after a tiresome and humiliating jog around the town looking for some choccy bickies.

A long day: I arrived on the West Bank around 7.15am, and left about 4.15pm.  In the sun most of the time, but body doing well.  Ramses III temple in some ways better than the Ramesseum in terms of its completeness; but ultimately a rather different building, hollow at its heart.  The battles, impressive as they look, are a sham.  Old Ramses III fought few of them.  At least Ramses II – for all the he may have fudged the result – did fight at Kadesh, and Tuthmosis at Megiddo.  What battles: the fact that we have their accounts – form 3,500 years ago… [My chocolate bix are called "Ramsis".]

These mighty battles fought so long ago - except that they were probably not so mighty – see the poem of Kadesh and its limited captives et al.  But even so, the thought of what at the time, to their combatants, doubtless seemed like world wars.  But against that, consider the might of Egypt: the greatest civilisation the world had ever known, perfectly poised and balanced; and yet they ultimately lost their empire and their freedom.  All the civilisation counted for nothing…

But the temple of Ramses III was superficially a wonder: the whole of the outer walls covered in text and images – apparently the south side has the longest extant hieroglyph inscription.  The grooves in the walls: caused by believers extracting dust for potions.  Walking back round to the first pylon, I was struck by the sense of size: if I had been rabble coming up to it, I would have felt so inadequate, so worthless compared to this.  

Inside, passing through the still standing gate, soaring high above with inscriptions – to the first court.  Vivid scenes – including a priest tallying the enemies' willies in a mound – charming.  The papyrus columns as impressive as ever – I realise that the swelling at the bottom helps.  There is so much colour left – it is hard to imagine this as three thousand or more years old.  Also the covered parts – though unfortunately the final hypostyle hall is a wreck, with only fractions of the shafts left.

Perhaps because of its "completeness", Ramses III feels far more repetitious than others – for example the Ramesseum.  Endless images of Ramses III smiting this, that, and the other, of him being touched on the lips with the ankh of Atum.  Interesting that the palace was mud-bricks: still there, but crumbling – as at the Ramesseum, friable history.  And so into the second court, more heads rolling, but a beautiful sight.  And such a perfect sky, I can hardly believe it.  

In the dining room – only half full – groups have moved on.  A long walk along the Nile – a glorious evening – warmer than last night.  I pass up to Luxor temple, then all the way back.  The ferries cross without lights, the big cruise ships are berthed, preparing for supper.  It may be heretical to say so, but I feel that it must be fairly dull way to travel.  The boats are doubtless attractive enough, but there is little variety, and you are stuck with a schedule.  And the people…

The day is odd here: everyone up early, to bed early.  The mornings are very special: the mist over the Nile, the air.  I hope to rise with the dawn again tomorrow, out to Karnak.  

Back to my visit of the Ramses III temple.  I was content just to be there, surrounded by the very strong sense of how it was.  Plus the bonus of relatively few tourists.  How they must habituate – as I run the risk of doing.  I must say that the Egyptian guides seem very thorough – and fluent in their respective languages.  For some reason, I was particularly impressed by the bloke spouting in Japanese – shows culturally biased I am.

Going back to the Queens' tombs: it was odd, seemed a lunar landscape.  Holes in the earth, into which you plunged to find photographs, almost of other times.  Strange to think they were sealed up in the hope that nobody would find them again.  And the Tombs of the Nobles too: especially on the hillside, a warren of the dead.  I am glad that I found the three musicians in Nakht's tomb: as it happens, I am staring at them now – they adorn my bedroom curtains, a rather bright lilac.  I find them very attractive; I keep on imagining them in the flesh, so to speak, or their modern equivalents. The tomb was beautiful, especially Nakht's wife. 

A slow cycle ride back to the ferry, passing intensely bright green sugar cane – even a sugar cane railway, as in Fiji.  The Memnon Colossi, as above.  The Nile plain is very lush: you can see what a miracle it must have represented 4000 years ago, plants from the desert, and how regulation, through the priests and king, was central.  The air clearing surprisingly, with the opposite bank's hills visible.  I wonder what happened to the balloons?

After handing in my bike – which served me well enough – to the ferry.  On it a young woman clearly in pain, and bloodied hither and thither.  As I correctly guessed, she had come off her bike, using the loose stones as sandpaper (I sympathise: I did something similar on Santorini, with an impressive motorbike skid on gravel…).  When we got over, I offered what assistance I could, but other Ozzies help out.  The ferry load was pure Egypt: rural men and women, darkly sitting there, the cake-seller ensconced in the middle of the deck, strange bundles to-ing and fro-ing.

It was a great day, reminding me very strongly of Nepal and Pokhara.  Cycling along, the sun pouring down, the wind streaming past, ascending to Hatshepsut's temple, to the Queens' and Nobles' places, discovering the unexpected glory of Ramses III – these memories will live with me while I have any.  And yet: there is still something escaping me, the sense of the past – a paradoxical consequence of the excellent state of preservation.  I must try harder, feel my way around…

24.2.90 Luxor, Dendera

Up early (5.30am ish).  Walk along the Nile to Karnak Temple.  Hot air balloon out again.  West bank glorious.  I enter Karnak, the sun low, cutting through the first pylon; I feel part of a priestly procession.  I enter the hypostyle hall: I have it to myself. 

Groups have begun to arrive, but the place is still nice (my fingers are cold, I can hardly write – shades of Walks with Lorenzetti).  Hatshepsut's obelisk, the side pylons seen through arches – all a bit (?) like Trinity College and its courts – rather grander… In the far distance, the train's huge diminished fifth bellow, a forlorn cry.  The hot air balloon floats into view.

Hieroglyphs always seem to fit perfectly, there is never a gap or suggestion of crowding.  In St Alban's Cathedral I seem to recall, there is a manuscript – about 10 feet by 8 feet – of the requiem mass.  Each part is written larger or smaller; this is the nearest I can think of to hieroglyphs in the West.  For example,  Hatshepsut's obelisk – such balance, especially the single line of hieroglyphs from halfway.  A strange, thundering sound, roaring about: the gods return?  I look up – there is the balloon, its burner making monstrous noises.  Amazing sight – view must be great – but probably fails to capture the majesty I see – you need the peasant's-eye view.  Finally the crowds arrived – so I left, at about 9am.  Amazing that I had it so long.  The old horse carriage drivers wanted ridiculous money, so I walked.  

Then sat in the sun for a while, an early lunch on the terrace, watched the clouds roll in, haggled for a taxi to Dendera – E£40 – and after a fairly hairy drive at 60mph all the way, along the widening Nile valley – impressive hills in the west, more distant on the east – passing through the tip of Qena, I find myself sitting comforted by the majestic pile of Dendera temple itself.  And the sun is out.

Roman Mammisi – definitely decadent, the Romans assimilated, not vice versa.  Inside dark, like something out of The Magic Flute – which begins to feel more real in its symbolism having seen all this.  On the north side, a staircase to the roof: brilliant view of the temple in its blocky harmoniousness and above all the great wall of hills behind, lit up and craggy.  To the east I can see the other hills.  The Coptic church alongside looks footling.  But best of all was the ascent: the turning staircase wall was covered in shallow reliefs, hieroglyphs, but all rather old and grimy – again, perfect Magic Flute stuff.  Coptic church also has grooves in its side – holy stone again…

Dendera is a gem.  I write now up on the roof, blowy, but a brilliant view.  To the west the hills; huge sand mounds, then stratified rocks, yellow turning to pink.  A vast string of pylons lope from horizon to horizon, a wonderful lesson in perspective.  From up here, you can see the brick walls particularly clearly, girdling the place four-squarely.  An excellent sense of the Nilotic plain here, wide enough to support an empire.  A curious sunken court – the sacred lake – with six swaying palm trees.  Rubble all around the place like a huge rubbish dump.

So, the temple itself.  What is striking of course is that it is dark.  We are too used [the bronchitic squeals of a poor donkey rend the air: what abject lives they lead] to ruins, open to the glorious sky.  But temples were usually covered – this was part of their majesty: they were secret, closed-in places.  Dendera is closed in, it retains the mystery.  Perhaps this is why it keeps reminding me of Die Zauberflöte: that is, about dark mysteries, about secrets.

The outer hypostyle is majestic, but the inner, because darker, and within the outer, even more powerful.  The decorations are frankly unexciting: poor workmanship, feeble hieroglyphs.  Interesting to note that most of the figures have been chipped away by the bleedin' Copts – vandals – but they left the hieroglyphs: why?  Respect, ignorance?  The Hathor heads that do survive – notably in the temple on the roof – tap straight into the Narmer tablet – 3000 years before them – longer than the entire christian era.  Things turn full circle…

But generally the images repeat listlessly, in enervation, the tradition burnt out.  Perhaps it was ripe for the Arabs with their fire and their new religion [I am being left alone on the roof – again, that feeling of abandonment, as if cast back through the centuries.]

The central sanctum is one of the most atmospheric of the holy places I've been to here.  Again, because it is dark, because it really is the holy of holies, hidden away.  You can imagine Hathor herself residing here, with her great wise eyes (how primitive all these animal-gods are).

On the east side, another mysterious staircase: long and straight, a steady ascent with knobbly hieroglyphs; on the west, a turning staircase past several rooms/chambers.  A great mini-Hathor chapel on the roof, hidden away.  Then modern stairs to the raised front.  As ever, no protection: a sheer drop.  Retro me sathana…  It really is quite cloudy now, though the sun has just broken through.  No great tragedy – I need to be moderated, but I hope the weather is better in Aswan.

At the front, by the edge, were more graffiti than usual; mostly Brits: James Mangles, Charles Inby (May 1817); T Sproat, CP Parker (1827); John Gordon (1804); and John Malcolm (1822), Holroyd (1837), DW Nash (1836), EK Hume (1836).  As I descend, the sun's rays break through the clouds – and form a perfect pyramid…

Downstairs, I am clobbered by one of the guards – who shows me the crypts – beautiful carvings, and fine picture of Hathor – unmutilated.  The mutilated stones are pock-marked, as if with a disease. Down in the crypt – down a creaky stair, crouching on all fours – the stench of cigarettes on the guide's breath.  

The sanctuary forms a complete room within the building.  

Between the first and second hypostyles: light and dark.  Hathor has a cheery face.  The half-screen at the front works really well, letting in light, but maintaining privacy.  The locks of Hathor – blue – hang down like drapes.  There is no real awe here, but occult power.  The stones on the stairs: worn right down.  I find Cleopatra – but no matching cartouche.  

Crazed drive back.  On the terrace.  Though the sun is not setting yet, it is already golden-yellow with the haze.  Very high above, swifts careen around.  The odd falcon.  Dinner is not yet served, and so – at 7pm – along to Luxor Temple.  I am sitting in front of the Kadesh text, garishly illuminated by sodium, making the stone look like a huge orange ice lolly. The whole place is ghostly.  A clear night now, stars spangling it brilliantly.  To the south wall of the first court: where I find the ancient representation of the temple itself, flags a-flutter.  Ramses II is so clearly the key – no wonder Mailer based "Ancient Evenings" around him.  In retrospect it does convey the details well and painlessly.  I think it fails to capture the majesty, the sheer sense of empire.

25.2.90  Luxor, west bank

Up early again, across to west bank.  Hire bike, but along to Seti I temple this time.  Nice – though nothing impressive like the others.  No other tourists – but there are archaeologists, and lots of fellahin digging holes, wheeling barrows.  It's gonna be hot today, methinks.  Up to the crest of the hill between Valley of the Kings and west bank.  The Valley itself is scorched rock, a barren, dry Lake District.

Ramses I: simple but good.  Each god's attributes are like the iconography of saints.  I find Osiris, his skin green/blue from death, wrapped in a mummy's shrouds, the most affecting.  Tuthmosis III – a real warren.  At the end of a defile, up stairs, down stairs, along corridor.  To the antechamber – strange, quickly-drawn images – a list of hundreds of gods.  Total silence.  In the tomb chamber, more line drawings rather than paintings.  Eerie.  Some of the text slants very oddly.  Tawsert and Setnakh – a nice contrast: long with gentle gradient.  Again, Osiris memorable.  Seti's tomb – beautiful low reliefs – and walls of hieroglyphs – including rough sketches – still waiting for the chisel.  A light red.  Looking to the entrance, the light catches the hieroglyphs – like a crazy wallpaper. An unknown mummy, dried to a crisp.  The white stone just begs to be caressed – or touched – it is almost sensual.  It is strange standing outside: looking down a huge black shaft; bright rock all about, brilliant blue sky above.

Horemheb – not a name one meets often – unusual cartouche.  Great scene with Ma'at, Anubis, Hathor, Horus, Osiris.  Tomb very long, very very deep;  Other side has Isis – with throne on head. Beautiful in her white dress to the breasts.  Amenhotep II: deep, very spare design inside, blue tonality.  Very austere.  Ramses VI – the most impressive in size.  Lots of unusual drawing – occult stuff.  It seems appropriate to finish with Tutankhamun – which in some ways is about tourists – the queues to get in are ridiculous.  Fine wall coverings – but all so small – footling really.  Enough.  

In the rest house, I think I am getting addicted to 7-Ups.  Tutankhamun was amazingly feeble, one room, and the sarcophagus and a few walls nothing compared to the other tombs.  This place must be a real cauldron of god in summer.  The heat from the bodies in the tombs is oppressive too – must be ruining the paintings.  Generally, here and throughout Egypt, the sites have  been very well preserved and restored – but not protected from us, alas.  

Valley of the Kings looks like a huge quarry, with an odd causeway of white winding through it.  Before the tombs were disturbed it must have been theoretically an extraordinary place: stuffed with the good and great of hundreds of years – a Westminster Abbey au naturel.  [It is such bliss to put my deeply pretentious/expensive Ray-Bans back on.]  One thing Tutankhamun does emphasise is what a tip it must have been when discovered.  The room so small, so many items.  The position of Tutankhamun is certainly rather drole: right under Ramses VI – no wonder it was lost.  

I sit now perched high on the crest between Valley of the Kings and the west bank.  A plane is coming into land; the Nile stretches out in one enormous straight band; I can see the opposite hills for miles.  The great temples – Ramesseum and Ramses II are before me like child's building models.  The Colossi of Memnon are dolls.

Halfway down to Hatshepsut's tomb – the dust is playing havoc with my eyes – the wind is getting up and a few clouds are appearing again.  The rock face behind Hatshepsut's looks like a literal curtain with folds; also I can see lots of Dantesque squirming figures as if struggling to emerge.  Grit in my mouth, too.

In the Ramesseum after the worst bike-ride of my life – blinded by grit.  As well as the Battle of Kadesh, there is the story of Dapur.  In fact the seizure of a city by storming must have been fairly innovative.  In Ramses III, second court.  The osirid columns, in different stages of  disrepair, look like Matisse's sequence of female nudes from behind: meditations on a theme.

I have been sitting staring mindless at the outside south wall, the huge hieroglyphic poem, the distant hunting scene, the sheer – still ungraspable for me – immensity of this achievement.  There are worse things to do on a Sunday afternoon in February…

Coffee on the terrace – then out on a felucca – haggled down from E£30 to E£8 plus E£2 baksheesh – still too much.  On "Rendezvous"… Sun sinking, wind "stiff".  Two on the boat, talking in Arabic – that coloniser/colonised again.  Best sunset yet – Aten a golden liquid globe as we pull across to the west bank.  The hills I climbed today now turning blue – a Leonardoesque chiaroscuro.  River very quiet now – a few feluccas upstream.  Honking madness on the east bank.  Aten turns orange behind palm trees.  Now deeper red, the cloud back to pink – the light reflected in cabin windows of the moored Nile cruise boats.  I should think travelling by boat – of whatever size – gets rather limiting after a while – this time period is far more satisfying for me.  The wind is up again, the ropes creak – I can see the attraction of sea writing – all that evocation.  Aten gone – the sky like a washed bandage, sun-dyed and faded, the colours turning grey.

No birds – but this morning, a flight flew over – long and almost straight – just the odd straggler spoiling the line.  A huge diagonal.  In the Nile – here as in Cairo – the odd piece of floating greenness – it looks like some lily.  It gets caught around the docked ships, stagnant with flotsam and jetsam, trapped with it all.

26.2.90 Esna, Edfu, Kom Ombo

Up early, then along to Karnak for a quick farewell.  What a place.  Then hire taxi down to Aswan.  First stop Esna – dusty, fly-blown place.  But in the middle of the souk, a huge pit – and a miniature Dendera.  Amazing.  But the sense of degradation of style inside – coarse hieroglyphs as if they no longer meant anything.  Nice flowery capitals to the columns, though.  

Beyond Esna, the desert really asserts itself.  The road on the east bank is the boundary between it and greenery.  The Nile's inundation must have seemed truly miraculous to the ancient Egyptians, life from death.  Everything would revolve around it.  We pass some mounds that could be crumbling mud pyramids, plus ugly factories belching smoke unceasingly.  The rocks of the surrounding cliffs beg for tombs.

Edfu.  Impressive, even in its late (only 2000 years old) Ptolemaic trappings.  Interesting that hieroglyphs have gone into the background.  Now images dominate – shift of emphasis.  In the court of offering: the  hieroglyphs look almost Chinese – they have lost their precision.  Entering the outer hypostyle is very like Dendera – gradual descent into darkness, into mystery.  But, my word, how depressingly bad the  hieroglyphs are…

To Kom Ombo, the Nile narrowing greatly, the vegetation losing its greenness, everything drier.  OK, a good ruin.  Also for its location – not some squalid circus pit, but on the promontory by the Nile.  Perhaps that is the main difference – the aesthetics of the site.  This late style reminds me of High Victorian Gothic – all gilt and fiddly bits.

What a day, which I am trying to redeem with a turkish coffee at a restaurant on the Nile – on a pontoon to be exact – every time people move, the whole thing rocks.

Anyway, my worst nightmare fulfilled.  I get to the hotel – Abu Simbel – only to be told that the last room had just – one minute ago – been taken – the offenders were still filling in the form.  Then a hunt around – to about five others – none could offer more than two days – even tried Kalabash Cataract – full and surly.  So two days it is.  After that...well, there was one other, too grubby to contemplate, but they may have a better room later. Ho-hum.  Aswan itself looks pleasant enough – a long corniche giving a Mediterranean feel..  The sun is descending behind Elephantine, the feluccas are out.

Driving through the arid desert today made me long for Cornwall.  Perverse, me?

The sun catches the Aga Khan's mausoleum high on the hill opposite.  At least I have a flight booked for Abu Simbel tomorrow, out at 1.30pm and back at 4.15pm.  I thought I should try all modes of transport to get the context.  It will be nice to see the desert from above.  The Oberoi Hotel in front of me is an ugly construction, like a water tower – Greenaway would like it. There is Euro pop in the background; how can I say it? Nice.  I'm obviously getting homesick.  The elegant ballet of the feluccas.  Lovely synths – I'm so tempted to get one.

Along the corniche, trees with huge red blossoms like rhododendrons that fall heavily with a dull squelch.  The pavement is littered with this prodigality.  Today's situation reminds me of Udaipur – when I read "Ancient Evenings" – and was rather ill.  Nice effect as the feluccas' sails curtain the sun briefly.  The almost-view – if I stick my head out – reminds me of the hotel in Queenstown.  Because of its resort air, this doesn't really feel like the end of an empire/land/country.  The sun hits the hills, liquid gold.  Re is gone for me.  A flock of birds, far away, like a changing dust cloud, peppering the sky.

Hell's bells – a kingfisher just dived in – and came out with a fish.  Mosquitoes out.  Watching now, as I watched last night: the felucca sailors climb the mast and pack the sail away (technical term needed).  A long walk back through the souk – the best I've came across in Egypt – lively, real – with smells: incense, spices.  Forms again – the pyramids of oranges, the subtle variation in dates, the baskets of deeply-coloured spices.  Nearest to India yet.

27.2.90 Aswan, Abu Simbel

Up to a slightly unsettled day: where will I be tomorrow? Yesterday evening I bought a ticket for Friday to Asyut – so I need two more nights somewhere.  To Abu Simbel at 1.30pm, so a quick trip here first.

A walk along the corniche, the public ferry to the island – I get lost in a maze of narrow streets – then to the old town.  Not much to see.  Nilometer, Temple of Khnum.  Good to see the Ramses II cartouche even here.  Lovely view of Aswan, Cataract Hotel etc.  Also of Elephantine rocks at the water's edge.  

Still nothing fixed – though lots of "come back laters".  It is strange how the aspect of a tour is transformed according to whether you have or do not have somewhere to stay.  Yesterday, as we drove around, the place was nothing but a hot unfriendly place, without form or beauty.  Sitting at the Saladin floating restaurant again, I could – for a moment – savour the sun and the tranquillity.

To Aswan airport early, to get a good seat.  But thwarted by bureaucracy – no seat allocated.  In other words, a mêlée.  I sit now in the deep shade of the outside cafe, waiting to get in line.  On the way here, via the old dam – the Brit one.  Fine lake to the left, straggly water to the right.  Then into desert – the airport is a long way out for some reason.  Real desert, terrifying.  A forest of pylons carrying electricity from the dam away into the shaking distance.  It's gonna be hot in Abu Simbel.

Travelling freely really is about the will: I wish it, and it happens; with tours, you are without volition – you just do as you are told.  The two could not be further apart.  

Well, this is Egypt – a delay of one hour – at least.  I stood for 45 minutes – yo – and now sit down, and will probably lose my window seat.

Amazing flight.  It confirms my worst fears about the desert: utterly implacable – definitely Empire's End.  Pure sand – just a tiny road, the Nile a distant presence.  A few dunes, later, strange rocks – this is how the world will end – dust, sand, heat, nothing.  This is how Egypt ends.  How all empires end.  Nearer Lake Nasser – huge, but drying up – there were clear signs of old mud – former levels – this last imperial folly too is a failure.  As we fly in, I see the temples – looking like sand castles made by a child – pretty one side, nothing the other – a strange jelly mould.  The statues stare pointlessly at the lake, face east to the rising sun.  Sitting in the coach – the sun is pitiless – at 3.30pm – deadly rays.

Temple of Nefertari.  Striking facade – the striding king and queen – last rays of light still catching it.  Inside, good Hathor heads on pillars.  Strange: even though the work throughout is rather crude, it has far more vigour than any Ptolemaic stuff.  Colours partly preserved.  Good to see queens represented so much.  Striking too the pose of the king smiting sundry baddies – the power of the legs' fulcrum (a triangle, the straight line of the arms, the twist of the hips – pure karate).  

Outside, a smile plays across his features.  To the big one, where Ramses seems not to be smiling so much.  Lovely baboons up top.  The poor man is covered with scratched graffiti, mostly Westerners – what a humiliation.  Hittite marriage stela – practically indecipherable.

Inside, powerful effect of osirid columns – some Upper Egypt, some Upper and Lower.  That same pose: smiting the enemy.  The king attacks a Syrian fort – and he does with a lively image of what it looked like.  But what an immense distance to travel – the penalty of empire.  Something I realised looking at the Syrians: they are bearded; ancient Egyptians never (?) are.  And today, you rarely see bearded Egyptians.

In the side chamber, I feel the first stirrings of that ancientness I sought.  Perhaps because it is crudely lit.  Everything else is too well-preserved and looked after – I have lost their ancientness.  They need to look more like the caves of Lascaux, or old castles.  I need some of their fear, their awe: electric lights banish this.  Torches – flaming light – would be better.  Also the unevenness (in castles) of the walls and ceiling helps.  I feel their uncertainty in the world.  Perhaps I need the junk of Tutankhamun's tomb.  I can relate these side chambers to my idea of the Philistines/Assyrians stuff of the same era; but not the others.  The fact is, the battles live more for us than offerings to Amun.  Therefore Ramses II lives more than any other.

Superb effect as you emerge from the innermost: bright light, the sky, a glimpse of the water.  Designed to catch the early sun, February 21/October 21.  To illuminate the four statues.  The Battle of Kadesh; again.  But reversed in direction – whatever the reality, one of the most powerful scenes in all Egypt.  The mighty king, the confusion of war, the great city portrayed in some detail.  I read the "Battle of Kadesh" text in its presence.  In the bottom right hand side the signature of its author, his own pleas for immortality.  Which he has.

Outside.  Unfortunately the building blocks look very silly – like some child's construction set.  The hills on the opposite side of the lake: huge wind-blasted cones, moonscapes.  

Window seat again: real blood-red sunset – sinking in the haze, a huge red band swathing the sky.  The desert as frightening as its shadows lengthened.

1990 Egypt I: Cairo, Saqqarah, Giza
1990 Egypt III: Asyut, Kharga, El Amarna
1990 Egypt IV: Alexandria, Wadi El Natrun, Suez

More destinations:

Wednesday 22 April 2020

1990 Egypt I: Cairo, Saqqarah, Giza

18.2.90 Cairo

Cairo airport interesting.  Already even there a certain pushiness manifest – I am sure that this will increase.  At least I have got the hang of taxis: don't take touts, go for official ones.  The ride in from the airport past military installations, huge hotels, the statue of Ramses.  Nearer Cairo, everything turns into roads.  And the driving – nobody obeys traffic lights, everyone wheels everywhere.  Near the main railway station, people add to the melee.  The station new, gleaming, floodlit.  We pass several metro stations, the "M"  peeking out from the Arabic spaghetti – apart from the inevitable Japanese trademarks, English is little in evidence.

I am now sitting in the reception of the Hotel Cosmopolitan, which is less as I expected, more as I hoped.  Gleaming white pseudo-classical architecture, ironwork, plants, creaking lift.  My room an odd polygon, crisp sheets, French telephone.  But everything teeters on the brink: light sockets don't work, locks are broken.  The drive here seemed long and circuitous.  We were beaten by a coachload of German tourists; tourists – of all nationalities – abound in their groups.  I will be the odd one out, again.  The streets, by night at least, have a strangely French provincial air about them.  Several women I have seen have been really attractive: small, dark, shapely, fine eyes.  The men vary enormously, from blackest Nubians to light yellow types.  

Breakfast – continental, even down to the "la vache qui rit" cheese.  Hot, strange coffee.  In a spirit of contrariness, I ache for Europe.  Brahms goes through my head.  Walk out to Tahrir Square – no signs, but instinct does not deceive.  Cars – Ladas, Peugeot 504s – every one battered and bruised.  Overcast day, but just right for walking.  Dust in the air.  To the Nile.  The NileThe Nile.  Slightly wider than the Thames.  Undistinguished really (except it is the only major river to flow northwards), but still the Nile…

Although there is clearly poverty, it is not Indian-style: the cars are too modern, there are too many people in three-piece suits – as well as galabijas.  Westernised women and women in scarfs.  The sun is breaking though; the heat is palpable even from this.  Summer must be hell.  To Cairo Tower.  The first sight of the pyramids through the haze, an amazing presence even at this distance.  Cairo creeps up to it like an urban bindweed – but dares go no closer.  Looking east, minarets appear on the hill above the city.  Otherwise all is hazy blocks of flats, offices, roads, cars everywhere.  Not a beautiful city, but one of manifest energy – and presumably the biggest for a good few thousands miles in all directions (is Delhi/Calcutta bigger? Nothing in Europe is).  One noticeable trait: the Cairenes seem keen on reading – everywhere, even the poorest worker is deep in his paper – without wishing to patronise, an impressive achievement.

It is nearly 11 o'clock, and still the traffic pours into the centre; does it never stop?  To Felfela restaurant for lunch – wonderfully atmospheric.  The smell of incense, strangely woody interior – tree trunk cross-sections for tables – and terrapins in tanks.  Bessara then chicken then om ali; we shall see what damage it does.  There is faint music in the background: Cairo is otherwise oddly bereft of it – just the bleat of cars and thunder of lorries.  Occasionally I pass a shop and hear a quick snatch.

In the afternoon to the Egyptian Museum.  Following the Blue Guide.  Limestone figures: they look life-like – presumably are.  Amazing haircut of bloke – layered beehive.  Menkaure triad – so perfect, so old – IV dynasty.   The more you look at the crown the more primitive it seems.  Why this shape?  So impractical.  And the hieroglyphs – already very sure.  42: A roomful of seated and standing people, four to five thousand years old.  The square headed Khafre in glorious diorite.  In the same room, amazing pic of the pyramids – taken from directly above Khufu's – abstract geometric images.

Millions of hieroglyphs – but I am blind to them.  Between rooms 21 and 16, mirror images in Arabic numerals.  I had not noticed until Egypt that we write our Arabic numerals from right to left: 21, 31… Four sphinxes in a row (there should be a better plural).  Room 7: a small insignificant relief of a couple receiving offerings.  For no apparent reason, every face has been mutilated.  Why?  8: scenes of dancing and music.  If only we knew what it sounded like.  The standard problem here: how can we look at 100,000 objects and see anything?  Also, if we use a guidebook to help us, we are looking at the wrong thing.  The guided tour – Germans mostly – are a pain.

3: Akhnaten.  Weird to be surrounded by his artefacts.  His face – long and thing - a serious young man.  Again clearly a portrait and no mere idealisation.  When he proclaimed his new faith he must have terrified people.  A fleshy nose.  A small relief of Akhnaten and Nefertiti – with faint grid lines on it – for copying?  Also a long chin – visible in the above, too.  A roomful of coins, stupid circles of metal.  But on one, barely visible: "aleksandro" written in Greek…

Curious, pondering figure of Ramses II, shielded by Horus, a great lock of hair to his right.  This is an eerie place, with its colossal weight of history – not one to be locked in at night.  24: impressive for all the granite they hewed: not easy.  Green schist of Taweret – as a pregnant hippo…  35: proto-semitic inscriptions: the smell of electricity leaping across cultures.  34: to see the classical stuff makes it all look very decadent.  47: in one of the Nubian rooms, a game board with dice – the latter identical to those of today: how far back do they go?  

To the central hall (at last – it's taken over two hours), and back to the Narmer Palette, which is stunning.  It speaks very directly of that time, of the forging of a country, of war, of dominion.  And yet it has writing too: empire and words, inextricably bound up, words giving empire over reality, to propose alternatives, to give orders.  Writing is empowering – cf. 19th century England, the reluctance to teach reading to the working classes.  Reading => new ideas => writing => action.  Words on global computer networks – tyranny-proof?  Cf. information blocks in repressive regimes – every typewriter registered under Ceaușescu…  Perhaps Narmer is moving because it is primitive – unlike most Egyptian art – which looks too perfect. 

38: the ancient games – the urge to model, to control, to play.  A pair of ivory castanets – I think I saw them in a relief before.  The atrium, like a huge temple – a foretaste, I hope.  A ray of sunlight cuts across it like something from an "Indiana Jones" film.  Despite the repeated signs around the place, everyone – myself included – has an irresistible urge to touch things.  Partly, I suppose, because stone cries out for it; partly to reach back to the past, to the person who engraved the words and the images.

It is amazing the number of old folks who visit places like Egypt.  What good does it do them?  Is it a rounding off of their lives?  It certainly is not useful.  Perhaps to pass the time, waiting for death.  The time to travel is when you are young and can be usefully changed by it.

18: rightly dominating the hall, the serenely confident massive double group of Amenhotep III and Queen Tiye.  Sums up Egypt in my image of it.  13: the Israel Stela – a magic cross-reference.  It is noticeable that a particular area has been rubbed clean – but who knows if it is right? Words.  The bell has rung – we must go…

I am now in Groppi's - not proving a pleasant experience.  Primo: I sit in a smoky, draughty place – my fault.  Secondo: when I move, the waiter goes bananas, perhaps thinking I am doing a runner or whatever; terzo: there is the cake, which when it turns up looks as if someone has gobbed all over it (perhaps they have…); quarto: the coffee's 'orrible.  Ergo: I will not be coming back – or tipping heavily.  Groppi's is near my hotel.  To reach it I pass a large clock – which plays Big Ben's chimes, aka Great St Mary's (ah, England, England…) - but apparently amplified through a grotty speaker.  Very strange.  

So, what of my first day in Egypt?  As I suspected, it reminds me much of Greece, Athens in particular, with its concrete, its traffic, the latter's noise, its antiquities.  The Nile is special, but not glamorous here.  The pyramids are a promise.  

Everybody smokes like a bloody chimney here.  

I am currently trying to work out my itinerary, the when and where that must be fitted together like a puzzle.  It is interesting how my novel is starting to affect me from the future, because my book's shapes are very much continent on what happened to me: now I am shaping my life to fit the book

[Parenthetically, I have quinto for Groppi's: tried to pay ten times the bill – thus making myself look like a typical tourist [sub-parenthetically – this should be discussed in "On Tourism", along with "The Language of Tourism", "Old Tourism", "The Demise of Tourism" – we can't travel because it's too easy, no sense of distance] and then sesto: I tip too much. Bo!]

This, for all its manifest faults for me – tubular steel chairs, rickety metal tables – seems to be the place dewy-eyed courting couples – perhaps the chairs and tables are specially-designed: the chairs thrust you forward over the exiguous tables.  There seems to be a lot of it going on – and this a Muslim country.  However, to keep things in perspective, my debacle here – and the cost of my rest in this stimulating if none-too-endearing place – was around 50p.

Today is Sunday – in some places.  So far as I can tell, Egypt is a bit schizophrenic: Friday is the Sabbath, so to speak, but Sunday seems half one too.  We shall see on Friday.  Speaking generally (and extrapolating from about two points) just as the women seem to balloon as they age, the men, perhaps in compensation, seem to become attenuated.  There are fat old men here, of course, just as there are svelte old women; but we are talking gross simplifications here [I remember the temple tower in Guangzhou: why? Why now?]  

God knows why, but this place has filled out nicely: there is a gentle conversational hubbub in Groppi's now.  Even without my novel-to-be, I am sure that the secret to this place is the writing.  This is the first time I have been anywhere that was opaque: in Russia I could at least transliterate, and in India, Roman script abounds.  Here it is an effort even to read the numbers of buses; it is like Bergman's "Cries and Whispers": I am trapped in a silent land.  Cultural reference is the same: if I speak (of Bergman, for example), and it is meaningless to you, my conversation starts dropping out.

What are the urges to empire?  Is it partly that conquering of those who speak differently: is an empire defined by conquering those who speak a sufficiently different language?  If they speak another language, they are assimilated; if they have their own, they remain separate and retain the possibility of re-emerging as a nation. 

It is strange how in countries like Egypt, Greece et al. the lower middle/working classes wear suits without ties on their days off.  In Britain, people would never do the same.  Is one function of the cigarette to provide a legitimisation of the hand covering the mouth when talking?  In normal conversation, doing so is fairly obviously a sign of evasion.  A cigarette allows you to satisfy the primal urge to hide what you say, without appearing to.  This thought flows from watching the tête-à-tête around me.

To the left of me, a German is reading a translation of "The Confederacy of Dunces" – a quotation I recently came across (Swift); a Frenchman reads "Prague's Dimanche" – of which I know nothing.  An overweight Westerner in a loud check jacket smokes a cigar ostentatiously.  My language problems continue: one of the charlies here is hell-bent on moving me to another table – and wants me to order more.  Since I have not touched the accursed cake, this is hardly on.  My ankles are cold.  The wind rises quite surprisingly in the evening.  Sitting outside in Tahrir Square (memories of the square by Oslo's Rådhuset) the fountains spray was lifted and carried some way.  The wind rose, bowling grit and garbage before it.

What extraordinary behaviour: charlie comes up to me again, and suggests I want to move.  I disabuse him.  He offers to replenish the yummies I had before.  I refuse this too.  He then gets uppity – so I get up, and leave.

To the Nile, which looks good by dusk.  Tahrir Square lit up like Piccadilly Circus.  Along the Nile Corniche, past huge hotels staring at nothing in particular.  Birds fly overhead, feluccas bob at anchor.  I walk to Garden City, to El Nil hotel, then up to the UK embassy.  I buy a bag of bickies.  I survive crossing the roads – I now realise that the old woman I saw crossing the traffic in front of the Vittorio Emanuele monument in a semi-suicidal fashion must simply have had Egyptian blood in her.  Back to Felfela – the old Lonely Planet gives pretty lukewarm recommendations to everything else.

Afterwards.  The ghanoush (aubergine pate) spicy, and the fegatini (ah! Shades of Arezzo) particularly liquid in their tenderness.  I have been really weak: I have ordered om ali – nuts, raisins, pastry, milk - again; last time it was ambrosial.  The bustle in this place is magic.  Tens of white-wrapped waiters zoom around – creating quite a draught – while DJ'd top men look on benignly.  I do believe the place is full to bursting – rightly so: the food is excellent and cheap.  And not many Japanese – unlike everywhere else.  Here is seems to be Germans, Brits and other Euro trash. 

The design of the place: long and narrow, in three sections not counting the entrance hall which also doubles as part of the kitchens.  The first part (where I sat at lunchtime) has raised levels, terrapins and baby crocodiles (well, that's what the book said).  Next, the bar, then a larger section that really seems to pack them in.  Interesting wicker work on the ceiling, variously ornate lamps (i.e. bulbs).  Wood and stone everywhere; nice.  Queues at the door.  The bustle accelerates.

19.2.90 Saqqarah

With Mohammed (E£50 the day) to Saqqarah.  Long busy road parallel to the Nile.  English signs soon disappear – glad I'm not driving.  Cool day.  Sun breaking through high clouds.  At Memphis the landscape changes: sand.   Saqqarah is all sand – with rubble everywhere.  The pyramids set on a plateau.  A cool breeze blows, the sun occluded.  A ringing tintinnabulation as I arrive: stonebreakers, metal on rock.  The long, impressive causeway – beautiful dressed stone.  

To the pyramid of Unas – inside my first pyramid.  Weird, descending steeply inside the stone – about four feet high.  Then hit by the warmth – and tobacco smell – Egyptians inside, waiting to "explain".  Inside, the Wendy doll-house-shaped room, covered in texts, the ultimate wallpaper.  Completely silent.  According to my book of translations, these are the oldest of the pyramid texts – and hence nearly the oldest Egyptian: "Re-Atum, this Unas comes to you…"  The urge to graffiti: the urge to immortality.  Page 36 of Miriam Lichtheim's "Ancient Egyptian Literature Vol I": the cannibalism – weird. The sense of ancient rites and knowledge. Why these texts? Why these combinations?

The cartouche of Unas everywhere – a word I can read.  On the north wall, a row of them.  Fifty-six of them.  Above, another row, but not as many.  Interestingly, the cartouche is reversed on the north and south walls – presumably all the texts are.  Traces of blue remain in some of the hieroglyphs.  

Outside into the brilliant sunshine, the air still cool.  To the Persian tombs, locked with a padlock made in China… Climbing a dune I am confronted by the sands.  In the distance, the "bent" pyramid.  On the south side, you see the structure clearly, in a section.  Also huge hieroglyphs on the face: an ancient Egyptian billboard.  By the southern tomb of Zoser's courtyard, there is an amazingly deep shaft.  You can see the strata of sandstone.  What a feat.  The Southern House: now we traipse in to see ancient graffiti. 

Ptah-hotep – nothing from the outside, astonishing inside.  The colours so vivid – but surely damaged by the careless visitors – soon it will be shut off: I am lucky again.  No gods, no cartouche [the cartouche: royal vanity helped decipher hieroglyphs].  The  hieroglyphs are slightly archaic – some of the earliest.  The musicians over the door: flute, singer, harpist, clapper.  A long, low flute.  The ochre, greens, blues, blacks – four to five thousand years old.  The detail: a calf's birth, wrestling youths, acrobats, the simulated palm trunks of the ceiling.  The sophistication – manicure and pedicure.  It's been downhill all the way, really.

To the Serapeum, surely one of the oddest places in the world.  A huge, long corridor, with enormous sarcophagi on each side – those of the bulls.  They look like giants' tombs, or those of aliens.  Unbelievably large chunks of granite.  The tunnel itself is collapsing – there are timbers shoring it up – a little worrying.  Warm again – with birds in here.  

To the end, to the final bull sarcophagus on the right: magnificent stone over one foot thick, the lid two feet thick – how did they manoeuvre it all?  Crude hieroglyphs scratched in the beautiful stone.  The ancient Egyptians seem to have had a real sensibility for stone.  But what effort, to what an end…  In the side corridor, an abandoned sarcophagus almost blocking it.  It has a sense of abandonment still, as if left yesterday.

The sun is high now, and quite warm.  I am by the pyramid of Userkof.  Its entrance is everything one imagines – a gap rent in the rock face, a black hole, with precarious slabs perched above it.  Nothing to see, though.  To a certain extent, the pyramids are a negation of the flat desert, a statement of humanity.  Zoser's is extraordinary: each of the five layers like a slap in the face of the sand.  To Teti's pyramid after Mereruka – the latter feeble after Ptah-hotep – coarse workmanship, crude images.  Teti is bigger than Unas, but fewer of its texts survive.  Once again, his cartouche is in evidence.  Magic: "O great strider/who sows greenstone, malachite, turquoise – stars!/As you are green so may Teti be green,/Green as a living reed!".

Memphis: what a name, what resonance.  The reality – a dusty lay-by on the road to Saqqara.  A sphinx, a few stelae – all that is left of the country's capital.  Except, of course, the ultimate insult – that of Ramses II, a huge prostrate form, flat on his back- the weakest position.  Massive – and impotent.  He can't even see Memphis.  Typically, he is covered – shoulders, chest, girdle, wrists, the stick in his hands – with his cartouche, repeated like propaganda.

Back in the haven of my hotel – more of that anon – the coffee has arrived, smelling as French as ever (memories: the Parisian youth hostel miles out, the huge bowls of coffee).  Driving with Mohammed: a near-chain smoker (E£1 for 20 – no wonder); a childhood smell; getting into a car I smelt old smoke, cheap plastic – the Ford Zephyr, the Zodiac.  Seems hard to believe my parents smoked; thankfully, they both gave up early ["Smoking is bad,/for a Dad,/it can cause lung infection./Although it has not much detection."] I hate fags, but the smell of cigs in third-world taxis is right, somehow.  As we approached Cairo, the sun on my neck, the same tape played endlessly, the traffic coagulated.  Soon we were at a standstill, despite the constant jockeying, misses by an inch.

To Ramses Station; a nightmare.  The worst job in the world: traffic policeman in Cairo, their dinky chequered sleeves waving impotently.  Here the "Just Me More" principle reaches its logical conclusion: everybody always trying to edge through – result: gridlock.  In a few years' time, Cairo will be solid from dawn to dusk.

Parenthetically: my three guide books complement each other well.  The Lonely Planet is demotic, no nonsense, practical and helpful; the Blue Guide is aloof and aristocratic, usually very comprehensive, but rather cold; Michael von Haag's book for Travelaid – the both of which I have never come across – is anecdotal, detailed in a personal way – and feels rather like I hope Walks with Lorenzetti feels: knowledgeable yet intimate. I'm certainly glad I brought Mike's book along – it was touch and go at one point.

So, at Ramses Station.  Without much objection from me, old Mohammed shows me where the sleeper ticket office is.  Mini-disaster: 22 February is full up; I take one for 21st, leaving 7pm, for E£141.  Sounds expensive (ish), though apparently dinner and brekkers is included.  So I leave a day early.  I love long train rides – this one is about ten hours.  It is the only way to get the feel of the country.

Then a long, slow, painful drive to the old Cosmopolitan.  Baksheesh for Mohammed, then to here.  I note that the E£3 spent on Saqqarah was the best value I ever had, except possibly for the complete works in Italian and Latin of Dante, published by OUP, and costing me 60p in a second-hand bookstall held in Cambridge at the Fitzwilliam Museum.  I've never seen the latter elsewhere at any price.  A treasure.

The landscape around Saqqarah very lush.  Waving palm trees, blindfolded donkeys circling water pumps, camels, asses, horses, women, children, bikes, motorcycles everywhere.  At times the wind was wicked, what with the sand – murder for contact lens wearers.  The rest-house tent selling cake and chicken-flavoured crisps.  The attendants at the tombs tiresome when they try to turn into guides – you can't blame them.  Amazingly fluent as they switch from English, to German, to French, to Italian – the same phrase.  For them perhaps, there exists this strange schizo language "European" – not so very different from each other, anyway.  Impressive really.  That Serapeum, a disturbing image of institutionalised madness.  The effort that went into the construction of it all.  Bulls, indeed.  

After coffee, out for a preprandial.  Towards Ezehbehiyah Garden.  People out for their passeggiata, bustling streets à la Bond Street.  Ezehbehiyah is split in two by stalls – clothes, shoes, music, books,  The gardens closed.  At the edge I watch the sunset.

Then along Opera Midan to the tourist office – but I can't think of any question.  To the clock – and into a bookshop.  I was weak: as well as Middle East News, I bought Gardiner's "Middle Egyptian Grammar" – for E£55, a snip.  Well, it had to be done.  It's cheap, not too heavy – looks like a cheap reprint.  To the room, reading newspaper.  Then to Felfela – well, it's good and reasons as above.  No room for me.  Once round the block, then back – to try fuul – is this wise?

Handshaking here seems a much more natural action then in the UK.  There, the hand is almost a challenge, thrust at you; here, the hands meet and melt in a warmly fluid action.  

The experience of descending into the earth – the pyramids, the Serapeum – so odd.  It really is like entering the underworld, a parallel realm.  (cf. "Citta' Invisibili" – which I must read in Italian).  A comment from Mohammed, after Memphis, trying to direct me into one of his pet souvenir shops: "real papyrus – not bananas!"  I note that the banknotes of Egypt not only have (our) Arabic numerals, but even "Central Bank of Egypt".  Such is the power of the tourist.

20.2.90 Cairo

Reading Gardiner last night – what a book, what a world.  Interesting facts about ancient Egyptian: related to Semitic and Hamitic; but like English, is a collapsed, stripped-down language – lost lots of forms, letters etc.  Suggests fusions of two tongues – like English and Norman – that is, conquest of one tribe by another and the resulting linguistic erosion.  These events must have happened around 6000 BCE say – seven or eight thousand years ago. Language is like DNA: it bears the imprints of all miscegenations.

Along to El Misr travel agency.  Terribly helpful – but ultimately only offering very expensive hotels in Luxor and Aswan.  I'll see what happens when I'm there.  In the Egyptian Museum.  Given the vastness of the Tut collection, only a rush through the upper galleries.  Odd to be surrounded by all these sarcophagi – like the scene in the film 2001: the sleepers waiting to awake.  And the words everywhere.  The ancient Egyptians were like children with logorrhea: they had the same with writing – every surface covered, as if they were tapes of their speech, to stop them becoming dumb.

Other exhibits – the alabaster vases.  The beautiful papyri – cruelly exposed to the light.  A room full of ships and other models.  Mummified animals; cases full of brilliant blue glazeware – gorgeous turquoise.  But I am stalling: I must essay Tut himself.

Greeted by the man: two black and gold statues.  I see his cartouche for the first – but hardly the last – time.  Wonderful scimitars – weird instruments.  Ostrich fan with cartouche.  Ankh symbols – gilt, looking like Jean Tinguely mobiles.  Horrible mummies of babies (foetuses).  The pix around the room of the tomb – like an old lumber store – junk everywhere, but 3000-year-old junk.  Wonderful recognising his cartouche – a signature, a voice.  A coffin with a lock of hair from the queen's grandmother…  Everything – even knobbly flails – has his name on it – "this is mine".  A model of a granary – with grains.  In an earlier room, dessicated figs, raisins… 324: what a masterpiece, details. Poor old Nubians get it again.  Hundreds of small images of the king, all with his name – like amplifications of the soul.  Glorious throne, amazing moulding of king and queen.  Bee and sedge on sides.  Even Aten has a uraeus.  A caseful of throwsticks, some looking like boomerangs.  The craftmanship of the alabaster – puts Nottingham to shame. And the lamp: what patience to make it.  The gilt canopic jars and their boxes.  A nice effect: looking at the outer tomb, the first tomb can be seen reflected in the glass so as to appear inside it: intentional?  Or the gods looking after their own?

Lunch in the café? – my stomach is beginning to give a few warnings, so I need to ease up.  I am knackered.  Tut is impressive – the wealth – the inner coffins weigh 100 kg – solid gold – and the opulence of the king's lifestyle.  But of course the abiding impression is of how much has been lost: Tut was a footling, young king.  Imagine what the splendours of Ramses II were.  And imagine the glee of the tomb robbers.

To Midan Hussein – eventually.  Usual traffic madness – I think taxicabs may earn their rates.  The number of near-nicks for cars – and people. [Parenthetically, I seem to have ended up with a Turkish coffee: it looks like black sludge – but tastes quite nice.]  Having been dumped somewhere, I had to find where.  No signs in English, and nothing really looked like the map. Some wandering, then I found the Mosque of Hussein.  Alas, one of the two forbidden to non-Muslims.  An odd design, with Gothic (sic) windows – influenced by Sir George Gilbert Scott, apparently.  

Then a wander through the Khalili souk.  This place is really Arabic.  Reminds me of Chandni Chowk and Jaipur, Jodhpur et al. A real warren – but civilised, vaguely touristy.  Not that much pressure, though.  Indeed, contrary to reports, I've had little in the way of such hassle.  Perhaps it's me.  Also, parenthetically, relatively few beggars.  Only a couple of begging women and children, or legless cripples.  Also noticeable are the kids trooping to and from school – very young.  Bodes well for the country.  

I wander further, looking for the incense bazaar.  I get lost, and find myself increasingly in muddy backstreets.  Horses are more common.  Not quite as bad as Jaisalmer.  Still not very threatening – I felt less safe in Varanasi, behind the main burning ghat.  Eventually I re-orient myself.  Time for a mosque – that of Sultan al-Mu'ayyad Mosque looks good.  E£1 to get in – and have my shoes locked up.  Inside, fairly decrepit – but in use, which I always find a bit off-putting.  Some repairs going on, men having a kip.  I go up the minaret, led by the effusive doorkeeper working hard on his baksheesh – too hard on him, poor, broken-winded smoker that he is.

To the first stage, in a dusty, dusky winding staircase.  Pretty rough – reminds me of Montepulciano, where you ascended a series of rickety ladders to the top of the tower pretty much at your own risk.  The view: 'orrible.  Egyptians seem to use their roofs as dustbins, piling junk and debris up there.   Everything is grey and dusty – a city, however ancient and medieval, of concrete – even the minarets.  It looks better from below.  Ascending to the very top of the tower, things didn't improve.  [Ultimately, all books become Books of the Dead.] [How ugly Westerners must look with their Al-amarna drooping faces, their sharpness, their lack of grace.]  I can see most of the main mosques - Ibn Tulun, Sultan Hassan, Al-Azhar, Al Hakim; I can see the wall of hills, the old citadel.  All grey, hung with haze.  Blocks of flats girdle the city.

Egyptians are such hedonists – the ultra-sweet coffee and food, the water-pipes.  A European wearing a tie – must be British.  In the awning of this café, it is cool.  To my right, the grey-yellow sandstone of Hussein and the constant barking of horns.  PS: I never found Tut's horn in the Egyptian Museum.  Pity.  But there were good smells in Khan el-Khalili – incense, strange perfumes and – most evocative – liquorice...the smell of distant childhood.  A woman selling monkey nuts moves next to me with her charming but snotty kids.  She is wrapping the nuts up in pages from an Arabic book – not a valuable one, I hope… A scene from the past…  To the Mosque of Al-Azhar.  A big open space.  As I sit in the sun, the muezzin's voice bleats from the hidden loudspeakers.  The faithful gather for prayer.  They line up inside, bowing periodically. In Khan el-Khalili, I hear music for the first time – as in India and Nepal.

A walk to the Nile (sounds good, dunnit?).  Then, weakly, to Felfela's – who have redesigned their menu without asking me.  Usual reasons.  At least today I am back in the main part, not the front.  And I have ordered quail.

The ancient Egyptian that has come down to us is like a mummy: an eviscerated skeleton.  If we have the odd canopic jar – through Coptic (sic) – it is not enough to bring it back to life.  Despite all the spells we have, we don't have the one to effect that.  Indeed, ancient Egyptian is a twitching skeleton.  Also note: the first history (= written) is probably Narmer's tablet.  First halting attempt at writing, and first proud statement of identity (the king's name) and celebration of upper Egypt conquering lower Egypt – "the men of the papyrus brought captives" – nice symbolism that it would be papyrus that revolutionised writing many years later.  Compare the living, witty forms of hieroglyphs with cuneiform – a spiky, accountant's language.  Hieroglyphs capture the initial wonder of words – as in "Nar-mer" – hearing them with a fresh ear, childlike, not grown-up and analytical.

21.2.90 Giza

As I write, I sit at the heart of Khufu's pyramid.  What an experience.  Millions of tons of stone about me.  A crazy passage here: very long, narrow and steep – and quite claustrophobic if you thought about it too long.  And how do we get out with the hordes coming in?  A teaser...

I arose early, hoping to beat the crowds here – which I did – but I also hoped to be able to climb this thing – which looks unlikely – tourist police are everywhere.  Perhaps I am not too disappointed.  At 8am, I have the place to myself.  A glorious morning, a light mist over Cairo.  Clear blue sky.  The pyramids cast huge, dark shadows on the sand.  They are immense, glorious.  Nearby Cairo – and there is a lot of it between the Nile and here – is a footling excrescence. 

The huge slabs here are so perfectly dressed – not the faintest gap in the black granite.  Huge slabs in the centre.  We are very trusting of the ancient engineers – I wouldn't trust anything of ours after a few thousand years.  It is very warm in here, the stored body heat of thousands, I suppose.  Everyone else seems very light-hearted and trivial, as if intoxicated.  Cameras in the main gallery and tomb.  The lack of hieroglyphs makes it feel rather stark and lonely.  Perhaps no wonder that people spend little time in here: there is almost literally nothing to look at.  Even the sarcophagus is anonymous.

Amazing – I have the place to myself.  It is quite frightening.  I think I prefer it when there are others.  As they descend, the place booms menacingly.  Yikes.  This place is nearly 5000 years old.  I cannot grasp it.

In many ways, the gallery is the most impressive part: you get a better sense of scale, of the architectural achievement.  The long passage to it is amazing too: looking down along it, you are most aware of the sense of passing in to stone.  There is something rather sad about all these wrinklies staggering up here, half killing themselves.  Then they leave almost immediately.  Why bother?  I am in the chamber leading to the hall: it is so impressive with its overlapping stones, edging in like some horror movie "Curse of the Mummy".  It gives a good idea of the (presumed) diagonal construction here (everywhere?).  Imagine if the lights went out.  On the way back, I take the descending path: very long, a real sense of down.  Kills the legs.  Smell of ammonia. The weight above me…

To the boat pit – a covering for my shoes.  Very impressive – about 100 feet long – it must have been a proud sight on the Nile.  Imagine a flotilla of them.  The sun outside is very pleasant now – strong but cooled by the wind.  No jacket.  My legs are trembling from ascending the steps to the original entrance – great exercise – and the lights did go out for a while…

Down to the Sphinx.  It is, as warned, surprisingly small.  Sitting in a chair for the Son et Lumière, the view is great: the three pyramids, the Sphinx crouching down in its quarry, peeping over the top.  Covered in scaffolding.  From here, the pyramids look as if they have a textured surface.

At last some hieroglyphs – faint on the outside of the south temple.  Out to Menkaure's pyramid.  I am surprised how easy it is to get away from tourist and touts.  No one here.  Cairo a haze in the background, a few skyscrapers, the pyramids, and Saqqarah behind me.  The two big pyramids in front.  I'm sitting on part of the fallen casing – red and black stone.  To my left, three baby pyramids.  At last, I can see the Cairo Tower through a gap, next to one of the small pyramids next to Khufu's.

To Ibn Tulun Mosque – with a driver posing as a taxi driver, and not knowing the way.  But this is what a mosque should be.  Huge open space, massive galleries, peaceful, beehive structure in the centre, curling minaret.  Up the minaret.  The view, well, grey again.  It strikes me that Islam is an open air religion in a way that Christianity is no more.  The citadel clearly in view and many other mosques.  Pyramids just visible through the haze.

Along to the Gayer-Anderson House – beautiful courtyard – reminds me of Museo Fortuny, and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.  Airy loggia.  Blue glazeware – thin and elegant in the Winter Rooms.  The writing room – everything beginning to fall into disrepair, dusty, faded, nostalgic.  A window half off its hinges.  Atmospheric library – great for a film.  A cupboard/secret door giving on to ta gallery for the women to watch the men.  Nice to see the interior reality of houses as they were.  And yet I can't help feeling that the style is over-rich, incapable of development – except to mannerism.  Very peaceful though, no other tourists – it's easy to lose them.  But as I said, even Giza was surprisingly quiet – at 12 noon, few coaches even.  Perhaps the season ending, he said hopefully…

Mad drive back to the Cosmopolitan for a much-needed coffee (drugs).  My face and neck definitely know the sun, which was quite strong today.  At least I should sleep well tonight.  I'm glad I'm leaving Cairo.  It's been great, but it is time to move on.  Luxor should provide a suitable contrast to this hustle.  It's just a question of what accommodation I can find.  Heigh-ho.

Cairo station.  Rather quiet really – nothing compared to India.  Eight tracks, no waiting room – so I have in front of me a thinnish liquid pretending to be orange – or mango?  juice, which I have no intention of drinking.  There are mosquitoes around here – a bit worrying.  A train sounded earlier – a huge, mournful diminished fifth.  

One thing that's nice (I think) about Egypt – that it doesn't mollycoddle: the minaret I climbed was deeply dodgy – quite vertiginous and made me feel unusually unsafe.  Perhaps all the visible garbage below attracted, somehow.  

On the platform itself, a little more disorder.  The train before mine is in.  Lots of train attendants hover, kitted out in a kind of blackcurrant mousse-coloured jacket.  On the train.  Wonderful.  Initial impressions are good, anyway: sleeping compartment for two, three seat (very comfy), washbasin, table, mirror – tous les comforts.

NB: when a later pharaoh wished to appropriate something, he simply erased the old cartouche.  Equally, after the heresy of Akhnaton, priests erased his cartouche everywhere.  NB too: the process of gods conquering local gods – Re-Amun etc – assimilation, changing name, keeping the idea – empire of Re at greatest with Akhnaton and Ramses II – and then all lost.  NB 3 (?): Egyptian architecture is based on accretion – the pylons added – and is therefore based on magnification – succeeding pylons get smaller => later get bigger.  Empire has to expand to live.  A contracting empire is a dead one.

Food – amazingly like on aircraft – served on trays, fold-down table, everything pre-wrapped – even individual condiments – some of it dodgy though.  Not alone as I hoped – the bloke I saw at the station turned up – with a cold.  Cheers, Re-Amun.  Otherwise a civilised experience.  Perhaps inevitably, the trains were built in Germany.  Messerschmidt (remember that show at the ICA…?)  The whole principle behind "baksheesh" is master/servant – dominion, empire.  Perhaps a lingering legacy of 2000 years of subjection.  Suez = end of the British Empire, beginning of a truly free Egypt.

1990 Egypt II: Luxor, Aswan, Abu Simbel
1990 Egypt III: Asyut, Kharga, El Amarna
1990 Egypt IV: Alexandria, Wadi El Natrun, Suez

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