It depends on which hymn but certainly they thought of the Nile as a representation of Hapy, especially in the flooding of the Nile: this concept of river god is not found only in Egypt - as the Greeks called the Nile a god (Nilus/Neilos).
Egyptians wrote on fabric made from papyrus, a reed plant found from the River Nile
The cataracts did not impede the Egyptians from crossing the Nile.
Henry Van Dyke wrote the hymn "The Hymn of Joy" in 1907.
It depends on which hymn but certainly they thought of the Nile as a representation of Hapy, especially in the flooding of the Nile: this concept of river god is not found only in Egypt - as the Greeks called the Nile a god (Nilus/Neilos).
Italian poet Giosue Carducci in 1865 wrote Hymn to Satan (Inna a Satana)
it is hymn
The Hymn to the Nile reflects the significance of the river in Egyptian society as all throughout the hymn the Nile is continually praised. They Nile was the source of all existence in Egypt as it created fertile soil, which in turn allowed for irrigation. Without the irrigation process then agriculture would have been virtually impossible, similar to that of Mesopotamia. In the hymn it is told that every God in Egypt loved and praised the Nile for its "gifts" to the society. As the people of Egypt loved the Nile and the Gods in turn also loved the Nile, the Nile then had a huge impact upon their society. The Nile, as said before, created the bases for a civilization at all. With the agriculture from the Nile, other trades were available to be explored. Such as; trade extension, merchants, medicine, science and writing, the arts. Without the Nile the Egyptian society would never have evolved and that is how it is solely portrayed in the hymn.
Egyptians are lucky to have the nile river because they need water to survive and for their animals.
The Nile was not harmful.
The Ancient Egyptians did bathe near the Nile River. In fact they bathed in the Nile River. The Nile River also provided then with food.
the Egyptians treasured the Nile