Analysis of Hanging in Egypt with Breyten Breytenbach



There are stones even here
worn into a malevolence by time
gritting the teeth and tearing
the eyes with the memory.

Out in the desert, the wind
is a sculptor working the ephemera
of sand. Desperately editing steles
to write the names of thousands of slaves
who died to make Pharaoh great.
It is a fool’s game.

And we are like the blind musician
at the hotel who tells us with a smile:
I’ll see you later.

The guard at the pyramid eyes me.
Are you Egyptian? he demands,
then searches my bag for a bomb.
At the hotel they speak Arabic to me,
don’t treat me like the white guests,
and I guess, even here, with all
the hindsight of history we haven’t
learned to love ourselves.

I cannot crawl into the tombs, and cannot
explain why. How do you say: In my country
they buried me alive for six months?
And so you lie and tell yourself this is love.
I am protecting the world from my rage.

Rabab tells me: We know how to build graves
here. I nod. I know. It is the same all over Africa.

Do you have a knife? Do you have one?
the guards at the museum ask Breyten and me,
searching us. We call this on ourselves. We
are clearly political criminals.

I trace the glyphs chipped into stone.
As a writer I am drawn to this. If I could
I too would carve myself into eternity.
Breyten watching me says: Don’t tell me
you’ve found a spelling mistake in it!

A line of miniature statues is placed
into the tomb to serve the pharaoh.
One for each day of the year. Four hundred.
The overseers are a plus. I think
even death will not ease
the lot of the poor here.

Statues: it seems the more I search the world
for differences the more I find it all the same.
Perhaps the Buddha was a jaded traveler too
when he said we are all one.

Mona argues about who should pay
to see the mummies. It isn’t often I can
treat a girl to a dead body, Breyten insists.

A woman nearby tells her husand she can see
dead bodies at work. Why pay?
Do you think she works in a hospital? I ask.
That or the U.S. State Department, Breyten agrees.

From the top of Bab Zwelia, flat rooftops
spread out like a conference of coffee tables.
Broken walls, furniture, pots, litter the roofs
like family secrets sunning themselves.
Two white goats on a roof chew
their way through the debris.

On the Nile, Rabab sings in Arabic, tells me
she wants to be Celine Dion.
She is my sister calling me home to Egypt.
Perhaps one day I will be ready.
For now it is enough to know I can
be at home here.


Scheme AXXB CADDXE FXX BDXBDXCD XBDXX DX FBBD XXBBX XXXXDA XEGF HID BHXD DDDDGB BFXBIA
Poetic Form
Metre 111101 1010111 1001010 0110100 1001001 10101001 1110001001 110111011 1111101 11011 011101010 1001111101 11110 011010011 11010101 11011101 10011110011 1111011 01110111 01110011 111001 11010101010 01111110110 110101111 01110101111 1101001111 111111111 111111101110100 111011111 01100101101 10111110011 1100100100 11011011 101011111111 11111010100 11011111 110100101 011100111 010111010 1111101110 001010111 101111 011011 111011101 1100001111101 0101010101001 1111111 101001111 11010111011 10110110101 01011101111 1101111 11111001011 11011010101 10111111 111010011010 10110011001 1100101001 1111011 111001 10111010011 11110110 111101011110 011111110 1111011111 1111
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 2,390
Words 477
Sentences 49
Stanzas 14
Stanza Lengths 4, 6, 3, 8, 5, 2, 4, 5, 6, 4, 3, 4, 6, 6
Lines Amount 66
Letters per line (avg) 29
Words per line (avg) 7
Letters per stanza (avg) 135
Words per stanza (avg) 34
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Submitted by Nazetel on September 01, 2021

Modified on March 30, 2023

2:23 min read
24

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