We were struck by the way in which this trip down the Nile allows you to experience the history of ancient Egypt. "You know the story, but you need to know our story," said Adel, our Egyptologist and guide to all things off the boat. That's why you travel. So we walked, and sometimes sat, for hours in Philae, Kom Ombo, Edfu, a few of which have been salvaged from the Nile, when the new Aswan Dam forced its waters to rise. We experienced the omnipresence of Isis, the stories of Horus, the falcon-headed god, the energy of his wife Hathor, goddess of music and joy, the hieroglyphics etched in the sandstone pylons and walls taking the form of a musical composition that you can hear as you walk through. But the temples of ancient Egypt couldn't freeze religion in their walls and stunning architecture if you listen hard enough, you can conjure up a picture of the temple as it was meant to be - a busy meeting point between the angels of god and men, lorded over by the priest-king a space for feasts and dancing, for reading the laws and rituals by which Egyptian life functioned, inscribed on the walls.