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INTRODUCTION
It is often said that it is better to have loved and lost than not to have loved at all.
However mundane such a saying might appear, it encapsulates the conviction
that human beings search for love and find ways to express it.1 Compare the
remark of Sternberg and Grajek (1984:312): "Love can be among the most
intense of human emotions, and is certainly the most sought after". According
to Rubin (1970:265), "Love is generally regarded to be the deepest and most
meaningful of sentiments ... it has occupied a preeminent position in the art and
literature of every age, and is presumably experienced, at least, occasionally, by
The reference here is to romantic love between a man and a woman. It is not my
intention to provide a treatise on all the different aspects of love as investigated in the
various disciplines.
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the vast majority of people".2 The fact that certain languages might lack a word
for a particular emotion, does not negate the possibility that it might be
expressed metaphorically, or even non-verbally (cf. Russell 1991:434; Toro
Rueda 2003:88). Any study on emotions should therefore aim at determining
"we1che
Konzeptualisierungen
den
Beschreibungen
von
Emotionen
und
welche
Mischungen
bzw.
Uberlagerungen
von
1984:312).
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likewise draw attention to the fact that language is central in the labeling and
conceptualisation of emotions.
Suffice it to note that for the purpose of this paper, by metaphor is meant
conceptual metaphor in terms of which conceptual worlds underlying the
various linguistic expressions are explored. According to Lakoff and Johnson
(1980: 115) "metaphor pervades our conceptual system ... because many of the
concepts that are important to us are neither abstract or not clearly delineated in
our experience (emotions, ideas, time etc.) we need to grasp on them by means
of other concepts that we understand in clearer terms (spatial orientation,
objects, etc) ... This need leads to metaphorical definition in our conceptual
system". Metaphor has as its primary function the cognitive role of
understanding abstract and complex concepts like love, life, mind, ideas etc. in
terms of more clearly delineated concepts like journeys, garnes, fire, buildings
etc. In light of the aforementioned theoretical assumptions, this contribution
offers a general overview of the ancient Egyptian notion of love as expressed in
two love poems viz., the Papyrus Harris 500 and Papyrus Chester Beatty I.
Furthermore, the conceptual metaphors that can be identified from the linguistic
utterances in the Egyptian love lyrics are highlighted. It is argued that
metaphorical language is among the dominant imagery employed to present the
view of love in Egyptian poetry. Through metaphor, the emotion of love finds
literary expression in the various love poems. Assuming the ubiquity of
metaphor across languages and the fact that Egyptian literature of every sort
abounds in puns and suggestive imagery, the employment of metaphor in love
poetry should corne as no surprise (cf. Davis 1980:111).
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the New Kingdom (cf. Fox 1985:181, 183; Westenholz 1995:2480; Bains
1996:166; Foster 2001:316). The lyric poetry of this period reflects an
emotional attachment, love, and erotic symbolism (Meskell 2002:126). New
Kingdom Egypt presents us with a "substantial corpus of existential writing
about humanity and the cosmos, complex mythico-religious systems, a highly
articulated sense of embodiment and personhood, evocations of romantic love
(emphasis added), eroticism, and sexuality, elaborate social relations, and so
on" (Meskell 2002:2). Compare also the remark of Gugleilmi (1996:335) in this
regard: "In der Ramessidenzeit wird erstmal eine von der IntensiUit des
verdichten Gefiihls, ErlebnissUirke und die Tiefe der Empfindung gepragte
Lyrik in groBerem Umfang greitbar".
A survey of the Egyptian love lyrics reveals that references to love in
ancient Egyptian literature are couched in metaphorical language. The
pervasiveness of metaphors in the articulation of certain emotions might
account for the use of this trope in the love poetry to express love. According to
Fox (1983:224), the Egyptian love poets develop forms and imagery through
which they articulate the vision of love as an individual feeling of pleasure and
harmony.4 Especially the use of metaphorical language adds to the richness of
ancient Egypt lyric poetry. Through the application of various metaphors the
poets "seek to capture and convey nuances of ordinary human emotion and
desire" (Fox 1985:296). Furthermore, metaphorical language captures and
encapsulates the powerful and peculiar feelings that constitute love (cf. Fox
1983:224). The metaphors employed in the Egyptian love songs convey not
only the power of love, but also the varieties and the textures of emotions that
love may engender (Fox 1985:325). The individual love songs express the
whole range of feelings of romantic love. As Foster (2001 :316) observes, "They
4 For them love thus is a "way of feeling, well represented by images of harmony and
pleasantness ... inspired by a lover but remaining in the confines of the individual soul"
(Fox 1983:228).
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are idyllic, tender, humorous, even satirical, sometimes naive, almost always
graceful; and the speakers range from self-sacrificing in the service of love,
pure of heart, hesitant, or intensely passionate, openly physical in their desire
even at times given to lust, sexual innuendo, and bawdy". It is an evocative
genre demonstrating that ideal love between partners was supposed to be
passionate, emotional and sexual (Meskell 2002: 128). Egyptian love songs
abound with pleasure, blending desire, love, and eroticism within the specifics
of an Egyptian semiotic system (Meske1l2002: 132).
Suffice it to note that, in contrast to the biblical Hebrew Songs of Songs,
most of these songs are monologues. As Westenholz (1995:2480) writes, "The
Egyptian love songs are exceptional in that they are mainly introspective songs,
describing emotions". These poems afford the reader insight into "the inner
thoughts and intentions of the lovers and the deepest and most intimate level"
(Meskell 2002:128; cf. also Toro Rueda 2003:8). The fact that some of the
Egyptian love songs are interior monologues makes the external audience
"privy to the speakers' deepest thoughts and feelings, showing what the
personae are really like behind the mask of public behaviour that people put on
when speaking to others" (Fox 1985:259). In exterior monologues, the
addressee is another person, which is understood as present and listening. These
monologues create an implicit listener, a silent partner in conversation whose
personality and attitudes can sometimes be read out of the words of the speaker
(Fox 1985:263, 264). The Egyptian poets preferred the monologue form
because they were primarily interested in accentuating the experience of
individuals in love (Fox 1985:316; cf. also Gugleilmi 1996:343). Commenting
on the difference between love songs and other modes of lyric expression in
ancient Egypt, Foster (2001 :316) writes, "Whereas the hymns and prayers, the
praises, encomiums, and battle songs ... all celebrate either divinities or the
divine king ... , the love songs celebrate love between men and women
(sometimes, boys and girls) - human love rather than divine love". One can thus
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concur with Foster (1995:162) that ''These songs are a precious inheritance
from the lyric poetry of ancient Egypt since they give the modern reader
glimpses of the intimate feelings and attitudes of young lives full of passion and
longing, intrigue and duplicity, love and sadness". They have indeed been
recognized as a fine achievement of Egyptian literature (Griffiths 1990:349).
Your love has penetrated all within me, like honey plunged into
water, like an odour, which penetrates spices ....1
I am excited by your love alone.
More potent than any medicine is my sister for me; she is more
powerful for me than the Compendium.
And when her lips are pressed to mine I am made drunk and need
not wine ... when we kiss, and her warm lips half open, I fly cloudhigh without beer! What paradise gained, what fulfillment, what a
heavenly turn of affairs!
LOVE IS UNITY!!
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My heart is filled with joy divine for I am hers and she is mine.
I am your favourite girl ... I am yours like the field planted with
prince of my heart!.
One alone is my sister, having no peer: more gracious than all other
women.
Love of him captures my heart; a precious youth without peer!
10
I see her - then I become healthy ... she speaks - then I become
strong ... I hug her - and she drives my illness from me.
lt is thy love, which gives me strength, Are you not my health and
my life?
LOVE IS A LOST OBJECT
Lost! Lost! Lost! 0 lost my love to me! God! God! God! 0 Amun,
great of might! I offer to thee all that can delight, Hear thou my cry
and bring my love again.
Related to the unity metaphor is the metaphorically understood notion of physical
closeness that expresses the desire oflovers to be physically close to each other.
9
According to Kovecses (1986:72) the special significance of the deity metaphor lies
in the fact that it highlights several emotional concepts associated with love in particular
the concepts of admiration, devotion and enthusiasm.
10
The first part of this expression could also be interpreted as an instance of the
LOVE/LOVER IS AN ANIMAL metaphor.
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LOVEILOVER IS AN ANIMAL
CONCLUSION
This investigation highlighted a few conceptual metaphors and their linguistic
instantiations in two ancient Egyptian love poems. From the aforementioned
analysis it transpired that even in the so-called pre-modem cultures, metaphors
seemed to play an important role in the way our ancient near eastern
counterparts conceptualised an abstract notion such as love. Furthermore, these
examples have shown how in a particular culture the emotional world can be
created on the analogy of the physical world. The teeming life portrayed in the
love poems is the verbal equivalent of the lush, nature-filled, and banquet-filled
scenes of daily life that were painted or carved in the tombs of the nobles at
Thebes (Foster 2001:316). Language indeed is a "repository of human
experience, whether physical or conceptual" (Kovecses 1988:88).
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bains, J 1996. Classicism and modernism in the literature of the New Kingdom, in
Loprieno 1996:157-174.
11
According to Fox (2003:126) many Egyptian love poems play on the love-trap.
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