| Chapter 7 |
1 |
As the chorus of `Mahanaim.` How beautiful were thy feet with sandals, O daughter of Nadib. The turnings of thy sides are as ornaments, Work of the hands of an artificer. |
2 |
Thy waist is a basin of roundness, It lacketh not the mixture, Thy body a heap of wheat, fenced with lilies, |
3 |
Thy two breasts as two young ones, twins of a roe, |
4 |
Thy neck as a tower of the ivory, Thine eyes pools in Heshbon, near the gate of Bath-Rabbim, Thy face as a tower of Lebanon looking to Damascus, |
5 |
Thy head upon thee as Carmel, And the locks of thy head as purple, The king is bound with the flowings! |
6 |
How fair and how pleasant hast thou been, O love, in delights. |
7 |
This thy stature hath been like to a palm, And thy breasts to clusters. |
8 |
I said, `Let me go up on the palm, Let me lay hold on its boughs, Yea, let thy breasts be, I pray thee, as clusters of the vine, And the fragrance of thy face as citrons, |
9 |
And thy palate as the good wine --` Flowing to my beloved in uprightness, Strengthening the lips of the aged! |
10 |
I am my beloved`s, and on me is his desire. |
11 |
Come, my beloved, we go forth to the field, |
12 |
We lodge in the villages, we go early to the vineyards, We see if the vine hath flourished, The sweet smelling-flower hath opened. The pomegranates have blossomed, There do I give to thee my loves; |
13 |
The mandrakes have given fragrance, And at our openings all pleasant things, New, yea, old, my beloved, I laid up for thee! |