Solomon the Lover and the Shape of the Song of Songs
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Reading the Song of Songs perpetually raises the question, What is this love that has been sung about so evocatively to ever new generations? The exuberance of the poetry and the remarkable history of its reception make the understanding of what the poetry is all about the more urgent for the conscientious reader.
Reading the Song of Songs perpetually raises the question, What is this love that has been sung about so evocatively to ever new generations? The exuberance of the poetry and the remarkable history of its reception make the understanding of what the poetry is all about the more urgent for the conscientious reader.
The shape of the Song and what this shape reveals of the poet’s concerns are central for this study. Hauge’s analysis discloses that a special arrangement of formally independent units, signalled by effects of repetition, is typical of its composition. The strophes are set out in a fivefold pattern containing three types of passage: narrative elements, addresses to the daughters of Jerusalem, and dialogues between the lovers.
The tension of the opening scenes dedicated to Solomon and his women, contrasted with a final scene where the king is the humble supplicant, reflects an underlying story of how Solomon the lover of many women was transformed into a lover of the One. The story is dedicated to the power of love, its character as an overwhelming force being even accented by implications of shame. Motifs of absence and separation suggest longing as the essence of love, the final image of the lover as the hart upon the fragrant mountains adding a tinge of sadness to the impression.
Themes from the Solomon tradition are important for the narrative strand. The formal shape and the cast of actors are deeply influenced by Proverbs 1 —7, not least when the poet plays havoc with venerable aspects of the wisdom tradition.
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table of contents | 1. Structure: The Basic Shape 1. The Addresses to the Daughters of Jerusalem (1.5-6; 2.7; 3.5; 5.8–6.3; 8.4) 2. Introducing Three Lovers’ Dialogues: 2.8-10a; 3.6-11; 8.5a 3. The Narrative Passages: 1.2-4; 2.4-6; 3.1-4; 5.2-7; 8.1-3 4. The Five Narrative Passages and the Structure of Canticles 2. Structure: The Basic Concepts 1. Love and its Proper Time 2. 8.13: Solomon the Beggar 3. 8.14: The Separation 3. The Awakening of Love 1. The Fifth Poem: 8.1-14 2. 8.5a: Who Is She? 3. 8. 5b: The Awakening 4. 8.6-7: On Love I 5. 8.8-10: On Love II 6. 8.11-12: On Love III 4. The Shulammite and the Strange Woman 1. Story and Admonishment in Proverbs 7.1-27 2. The Strange Woman in Proverbs 2.16-19; 5.3-14; 6.24-35 and 7.6-23 |
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