Song of Solomon 8
The bride asks the groom to be hers, and she promises to take him to her mother's house where she will give him spiced wine. The groom warns others not to disturb his beloved until she is ready, and he recalls the moment he awakened her under the apple tree. The bride asks the groom to seal his love for her on his heart and arm, and she declares that love is stronger than death and cannot be extinguished by anything. The chorus asks what to do for their sister on her wedding day, and the bride responds that she is a wall with breasts like towers, having found peace in the groom's presence.
1Bride to Groom: Who will give you to me as my brother, feeding from the breasts of my mother, so that I may discover you outside, and may kiss you, and so that now no one may despise me?2I will take hold of you and lead you into my mother’s house. There you will teach me, and I will give you a cup of spiced wine, and of new wine from my pomegranates3His left hand is under my head, and his right hand shall embrace me4Groom to Chorus: I bind you by oath, O daughters of Jerusalem, not to disturb or awaken the beloved, until she wills5Chorus to Groom: Who is she, who ascends from the desert, flowing with delights, leaning upon her beloved?. Groom to Bride: Under the apple tree, I awakened you. There your mother was corrupted. There she who bore you was violated6Set me like a seal upon your heart, like a seal upon your arm. For love is strong, like death, and envy is enduring, like hell: their lamps are made of fire and flames7A multitude of waters cannot extinguish love, nor can a river overwhelm it. If a man were to give all the substance of his house in exchange for love, he would despise it as nothing8Chorus: Our sister is little and has no breasts. What shall we do for our sister on the day when she is called upon9If she is a wall, let us build a rampart of silver upon it. If she is a door, let us join it together with boards of cedar10Bride to Chorus: I am a wall, and my breasts are like towers, since, in his presence, I have become like one who has discovered peace11The peaceful one had a vineyard, in that which held the peoples. He handed it on to the caretakers; a man brought, in exchange for its fruit, a thousand pieces of silver12Groom: My vineyard is before me. The thousand is for your peacefulness, and two hundred is for those who care for its fruit13Bride to Groom: Your friends are attentive to those who have been dwelling in the gardens. Cause me to heed your voice14Flee away, my beloved, and become like the doe and the young stag upon the mountains of aromatic plants
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