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(A)I adjure you, Daughters of Jerusalem,
    by the gazelles and the does of the field,
Do not awaken or stir up love
    until it is ready.

Solomon’s Wedding Procession

D(B) Who is this coming up from the desert,[a]
    like columns of smoke
Perfumed with myrrh and frankincense,
    with all kinds of exotic powders?
See! it is the litter of Solomon;
    sixty valiant men surround it,
    of the valiant men of Israel:
All of them expert with the sword,
    skilled in battle,
Each with his sword at his side
    against the terrors[b] of the night.
King Solomon made himself an enclosed litter
    of wood from Lebanon.
10 He made its columns of silver,
    its roof of gold,
Its seat of purple cloth,
    its interior lovingly fitted.[c]
Daughters of Jerusalem, 11 go out
    and look upon King Solomon
In the crown with which his mother has crowned him
    on the day of his marriage,
    on the day of the joy of his heart.

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Footnotes

  1. 3:6–11 This may be an independent poem. In context it portrays the lover as King Solomon, escorted by sixty armed men, coming in royal procession to meet a bride.
  2. 3:8 Terrors: cf. Ps 91:5; perhaps bandits lying in wait, unidentified dangers lurking in darkness.
  3. 3:10 Lovingly fitted: translation uncertain. The phrase “Daughters of Jerusalem” is read here with the following verse.