OUTLINE OF SONG OF SOLOMON
--A. Ralph Johnson
Theme: A musical drama in praise of fidelity of true love. A song about a girl from Shulam who is taken by the king to prepare to become his wife. She dreams of her shepherd lover (1:7) and his desire for her. They are eventually reunited. Various characters join in at different times. Also known as “Canticles”
There is no evidence of it being an allegory about Christ and the Church. It describes pure love, not sensuality.
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CHAP |
PARTICIPANTS |
OUTLINE Remembrances,
soliloquys, dialogue |
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1: |
Title |
“The Song of Songs, Which Is Solomon’s” (1:1) |
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I. THE KING’S PALACE (1:2-3:5) |
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Shulamite: |
In her thoughts she yearns for and speaks to her shepherd lover. Let him kiss me (2a) Thy love is better than wine
(1:2b-4) Take me away. The King has brought me into his chambers (1:4) |
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Shulamite: |
(Appeal to the court ladies to be understanding) She is dark because her brothers made her keep the vineyards (1:5-6) They made me the keeper of the vineyards; but mine own vineyard have I not kept. |
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Shulamite: |
(In her thoughts to her shepherd lover)— Tell me where you are feeding your flocks. (1:7) |
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Court ladies: |
(To the Shulamite). Go follow the flocks and find him. (1:8) |
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Solomon: (?) |
(First advance to the Shulamite, trying to win her). I have compared you to a steed in Pharaoh’s army. (1:9-11) |
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Shulamite |
While Solomon sitts at his table she thinks of her beloved (1:12-14) 12 While the king sat by his table... 13
My beloved is a bundle of myrrh unto me; he shall lie all night betwixt my
breasts. |
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Shulamite: |
In her thoughts her beloved praises her: Behold you are beautiful... (1:15) She responds: Behold thou art fair, my beloved and, in contrast to Solomon’s imagines their house as the beautiful green forest (1:16—2 :1) |
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2: |
Shulamite: |
I am the rose of |
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Shepherd |
He responds indirectly praising her: As a lily among thorns, so is my love among the daughters (2:2) |
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Shulamite |
She responds indirectly praising him: As the apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my beloved among the sons...his banner over me was love. (2:3-6) |
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Shulamite: |
(To court ladies). I adjure you, O
daughters of |
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Shulamite: (later?) |
(Excited exclamation) The voice of my beloved! He comes! (2:8-9) |
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Shulamite: |
Reflecting on or desiring her lover’s call to come with him Rise up and come with me, For, lo, the winter is past, (2:10-14) |
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Her brothers? |
She thinks of her brothers demanding that she trap the foxes ruining the vineyard which she was required to care for. |
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Shulamite: |
(She declares her place is with her beloved as he feeds his flocks) My beloved is mine and I am his (2:15-17) |
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3: |
Shulamite: |
(Reflection upon a dream) By night upon my bed I sought him (3:1-3) cf. 2:7; 8:3-4 She finds him (3:4) |
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Shulamite: |
(To the court ladies) I adjure you O
daughters of |
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II. PROCESSION OF SOLOMON (Possibly
she is reflecting upon when she was brought to |
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Chorus: |
Narration (Possibly four different speakers) Who is this coming...? (3:6-11) |
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III. LOVERS MEETINGS (Perhaps in her thoughts) |
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4: |
Shepherd lover: |
To the Shulamite. You are beautiful, my love (4:1-5) |
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Shepherd lover: |
Departure with promise to return. (4:6) I will get me to the mountain of myrrh, and to the hill of frankincense. |
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Shepherd lover: |
To the Shulamite of marriage. (his return?) You are beautiful my love (4:7-15) Come with me from the mountains of A garden shut up is my sister, my bride. (she is pure and untrammeled) |
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Shulamite: |
Her answer of acceptance to become his bride. Let my beloved come into his garden (4:16) |
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5: |
Shepherd lover: |
His joyous response. I have come into my garden, my bride (5:1) (I have come to take you as my wife) Eat O friends, drink abundantly (Call for friends to join in a wedding feast, or exhortation for the lovers to partake of the garden) |
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IV. PALACE EXCHANGES OF DIALOGUE |
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Shulamite: |
She recounts that in her dream she awakes to hear him calling. She opens the door in excitement (5:2-6) Open to me my love But he is not there (5:6) She runs into the streets to find him but is accosted by the watchmen who strike her and take away her mantel (5:7) |
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Shulamite: |
(To the court ladies.) I adjure you, O daughters of |
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Court ladies: |
What is your beloved more than others? (5:9) |
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Shulamite: |
Answer to the
daughters of My beloved is white and ruddy, the chiefest among ten thousand. |
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6: |
Court ladies: |
Where has your beloved gone? (6:1) |
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Shulamite: |
Answer to the Court ladies: My beloved is gone to his garden (6:2) I am my beloved’s, and he is mine (3) |
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Solomon: |
To the Shulamite, trying to impress her. (6:4-9) Thou art beautiful, O
my love, as Tirzah, comely as (But he is put off by her strength and rejecting eyes –6:4b, 5) |
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Court ladies: (?) |
Praise of those who see her strength. (6:10) Who is she that
looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun terrible as
an army with banners? |
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Shulamite: |
Reflecting upon being carried away (6:11-12) I went down into the
garden of nuts to see the fruits...and happened on the chariots of my
people. (12) Come Back, Come back, O Shulamite (soldiers calling her as she fled? -6:13) Why would you
look upon the Shulamite as a dance? (a play-thing for the king) |
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7: |
Court ladies |
To the Shulamite concerning her beauty. (7:1-5) How beautiful are thy
feet with shoes, O prince's daughter! The king is held
captive in her tresses (5) |
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Solomon? |
To the Shulamite concerning her beauty. (6-9a) How pleasant are you are O love for delights...and thy mouth like the best wine... |
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Shulamite? |
...That goes smoothly for my beloved. (interrupting the king? –9b) |
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Shulamite: |
She declares her fidelity to her beloved. I am my beloved’s and his desire is for me (7:10) |
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Shulamite: |
In her thoughts she calls to her beloved. (7:11-13) Come, my beloved, let us go forth into the fields |
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8: |
Shulamite: |
To her beloved (continued). Oh that you were as my brother (8:1-3) |
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Shulamite: |
To the court ladies His left hand under my head and his right hand embrace me (8:3) I adjure you, O daughters of |
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V. HOMEWARD JOURNEY |
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Court Ladies: |
Who is this coming from the wilderness? (8:5a) |
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Chorus: |
Love personified as speaking, of its
beginning with her birth Under the apple tree I awakened thee (8:5b) |
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Chorus |
Love personified, commenting on the importance and power of true love Set me a seal upon your heart, for love is as strong as death (8:6-7) |
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Shulamite: |
Recalling her brothers’ words in her youth but now she is grown. (8:8-10) We have a little sister and she has no breasts. I am a wall and my breasts are like towers thereof |
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Shulamite: |
Fidelity to her beloved over Solomon’s wealth. (8:11-12) 12 My vineyard, which is mine, is before me: thou, O Solomon, must have a thousand, (8:12) |
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Shulamite: |
To her beloved --conclusion (8:13-14) Make haste, my beloved.. (8:14) |
Key evidence her beloved was a shepherd, not Solomon:
1:7-8 7
Tell me, O thou whom my soul loveth, where thou feedest, where thou makest
thy flock to rest at noon: for why should I be as one that turneth aside by the
flocks of thy companions?