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Chapter 7

The Beauty of the Beloved

D? Turn, turn, O Shulammite![a]
    turn, turn that we may gaze upon you!
W How can you gaze upon the Shulammite
    as at the dance of the two camps?
M How beautiful are your feet in sandals,[b]
    O noble daughter!
Your curving thighs like jewels,
    the product of skilled hands.

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Footnotes

  1. 7:1 Shulammite: the woman is so designated because she is considered to be from Shulam (or Shunem) in the plain of Esdraelon (cf. 1 Kgs 1:3), or because the name may mean “the peaceful one,” and thus recall the name of Solomon. Turn: she is asked to face the speaker(s). How…: she refuses to be regarded as a spectacle (“the dance of the two camps” is unknown). Some interpret the episode as an invitation to her to dance.
  2. 7:2–6 Another description of the woman’s charms. Sandals: the woman’s sandaled foot was apparently considered quite seductive (Jdt 16:9). Noble: a possible connection to the enigmatic “prince” of 6:12. Curving…jewels: the meaning of these Hebrew words is not certain. Wine and wheat suggest fertility.