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The Beauty of the Woman

M Beautiful as Tirzah are you, my friend;[a]
    fair as Jerusalem,
    fearsome as celestial visions!
(A)Turn your eyes away from me,
    for they stir me up.
Your hair is like a flock of goats
    streaming down from Gilead.
(B)Your teeth are like a flock of ewes
    that come up from the washing,
All of them big with twins,
    none of them barren.
Like pomegranate halves,
    your cheeks behind your veil.
Sixty are the queens, eighty the concubines,
    and young women without number—
One alone[b] is my dove, my perfect one,
    her mother’s special one,
    favorite of the one who bore her.
Daughters see her and call her happy,
    queens and concubines, and they praise her:

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Footnotes

  1. 6:4–9 The man again celebrates the woman’s beauty. Tirzah: probably meaning “pleasant”; it was the early capital of the Northern Kingdom of Israel (1 Kgs 16). Celestial visions: the meaning is uncertain. Military images may be implied here, i.e., the “heavenly hosts” who fight along with God on Israel’s behalf (cf. Jgs 5:20), or perhaps a reference to the awesome goddesses of the region who combined aspects of both fertility and war.
  2. 6:9 One alone: the incomparability of the woman is a favorite motif in love poetry.