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9Also known as the Canticle of Canticles or the Song of Solomon. It is a book of Literature/TheBible that is a series of love poems written about the Shulamite and her Beloved (most commonly credited as [[Literature/BooksOfKings King Solomon]]). Bible students tend to [[EveryoneIsJesusInPurgatory view this as a metaphor]] of God's love for Israel (to Jewish readers) or UsefulNotes/JesusChrist's love for the church (to Christians).
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11Because of its language, it is usually not read to children until they are in their early teens, although a children's worship song "His Banner Over Me Is Love" is based on a verse from this book.
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13For the Creator/ToniMorrison book, see ''Literature/SongOfSolomon''.
14-----
15!!Structure of the book:
16* Introduction (Song of Songs 1:1)
17* The Shulamite confesses her love (Song of Songs 1:2-2:7)
18* The Shulamite adores her Beloved (Song of Songs 2:8-17)
19* The Shulamite's dream (Song of Songs 3:1-5)
20* The arrival of King Solomon (Song of Songs 3:6-11)
21* The Beloved adores the Shulamite's beauty (Song of Songs 4:1-15)
22* Together in the garden of love (Song of Songs 4:16-5:1)
23* The Shulamite searches for her Beloved (Song of Songs 5:2-8)
24* The Shulamite praises her Beloved (Song of Songs 5:9-16)
25* Together again in the garden of love (Song of Songs 6:1-3)
26* The Beloved and the Shulamite delight in each other (Song of Songs 6:4-7:10)
27* The Shulamite gives her love (Song of Songs 7:11-13)
28* Longing for her Beloved (Song of Songs 8:1-7)
29* Final advice (Song of Songs 8:8-14)
30
31-----
32!!This book provides examples of:
33* ACupAngst: An odd third-person example, in Song 8:8:
34-->''We have a little sister, and she hath no breasts: what shall we do for our sister in the day when she shall be spoken for?''
35* AmazonianBeauty: While the Shulamite isn't an ActionGirl, she gives the impression of one to her Beloved in Song 6:4-5.
36-->''You are beautiful as Tirzah, my love,\
37comely as Jerusalem,\
38awesome as an army with banners!\
39Turn your eyes away from me,\
40for they overwhelm me!''
41* ArcWords: "I charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem, [[OhMyGods by the gazelles or the does of the field]], do not stir up or awaken love until it pleases."
42* ArousedByTheirVoice:
43** Either the Shulamite or the Beloved in Song 2:14:
44--->''O my dove, in the clefts of the rock,\
45in the secret places of the cliffs,\
46let me see your face,\
47let me hear your voice;\
48for your voice is sweet,\
49and your face is lovely.''
50** The Beloved in Song 8:13:
51--->''O you who dwell in the gardens,\
52my companions listen for your voice;\
53let me hear it!''
54* AwesomeMomentOfCrowning: Or at least an allusion to one in Song 3:11:
55-->''Go forth, O daughters of Zion,\
56and see King Solomon with the crown\
57with which his mother crowned him\
58on the day of his wedding,\
59on the day of the gladness of his heart.''
60* BigBrotherInstinct: The Shulamite's brothers chime in at Song 8:8-9 about what they would do when [[UsefulNotes/{{Pettanko}} their sister who has no breasts]] is spoken for in marriage: "If she is a wall, we will build upon her a battlement of silver; but if she is a door, we will enclose her with boards of cedar."
61* BigEntrance: King Solomon makes one in Song 3:6-11, carried on a litter with sixty men surrounding him, armed with swords, and with incense wafting in the air.
62* {{Bowdlerise}}: As ''WebComic/LeftoverSoup'' puts it, "The part of a woman comparable to a cup overflowing with yummy juices is not the navel."
63* BuxomBeautyStandard: The Beloved describes the Shulamite's breasts a few times in some interesting ways. The Shulamite herself near the end of the story says that her breasts are like towers, which contrasts the Shulamite's brothers' comment about their sister that has no breasts.
64* CompositeCharacter: The Shulamite is believed by certain Bible students to be the amalgamation of all the women Solomon had loved and married to be part of his harem.
65* DescriptionPorn: Done a few times, with at least two of them about the Shulamite and one about her Beloved.
66* DontLookAtMe: In Song 1:6:
67-->''Do not gaze at me, because I am dark,\
68because [[TanLines the sun has looked upon me]].''
69* EroticDream: The Shulamite seems to have two of them -- one about meeting her Beloved on the street and taking him into the bedroom, and another about her Beloved paying her a visit at night. [[OrWasItADream Or maybe the last one wasn't a dream.]]
70* EternallyPearlyWhiteTeeth: The Beloved in Song 4:2 and 6:6 says that the Shulamite's teeth are like freshly-washed ewes, each having a twin, and none being barren among them -- a compliment in an age before modern dentistry.
71* FarmersDaughter: The Shulamite is depicted as this, growing up in an agriculture-based family.
72* FireWaterJuxtaposition: Song 8:6-7 say that love is a very strong fire that many waters cannot put out and floods cannot drown.
73* FlamesOfLove: From Song 8:6:
74-->''Set me as a seal upon your heart,\
75as a seal upon your arm;\
76for love is strong as death,\
77passion fierce as the grave.\
78Its fires of desire are as ardent flames,\
79a most intense flame.''
80* GardenOfLove: The Song extensively employs garden imagery to describe the erotic love between the speaker and her beloved.
81* GetTheeToANunnery:
82** Chapter 7 describes the Shulamite's navel as "a rounded cup, never lacking in sweet wine." Some scholars argue that "navel" may in fact refer to the vagina.
83** "I sat down in his shadow [i.e., sat down while he was standing up] …and his fruit was sweet to my taste."
84** "My beloved put his hand by the hole [of the door] and my bowels were moved for him." That has to actually mean more than it lets on.
85* GodIsLoveSongs: Many interpreters read this book as an {{allegory}} of God's love for His people. That interpretation requires some judicious reimagining, if not outright {{Bowdleriz|e}}ing, of what taken at face value is some explicit erotic imagery.
86* HotConsort: The Shulamite, whom the Beloved in this book is after to marry.
87* HotterAndSexier: Compared to the other biblical books of poetry, this one is far and away the most sexually charged.
88* IncestSubtext: The Shulamite wishes that in Song 8:1-2 that her Beloved was like her twin brother, that she could kiss and no one would look down on her for that.[[note]]Depending on which edition you read, there may be a footnote saying (paraphrased): 'It was socially more acceptable to kiss family members over someone you weren't married/engaged to.' Meaning she wanted to kiss him a lot, but knew tongues would wag and wanted a way to head them off.[[/note]]
89* JesusTaboo: In some translations, God's name is never mentioned; in others: Song 8:6 mentions the flame of love being like "a flame of the Lord." (A comparison of translations can be seen [[https://biblehub.com/songs/8-6.htm HERE]])
90* LegFocus: The Beloved in Song 7:1 compares the curves of the Shulamite's thighs to being like jewels shaped by a master craftsman.
91* {{Lemon}}: A very poetic one, but a lemon nonetheless.
92* LoveIsADrug: Song 1:2 has the Shulamite saying, "Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth: for your love is better than wine." The Beloved in Song 4:10 responds with, "How fair is your love, my sister, my spouse! How much better is your love than wine!"
93* LoveIsLikeReligion: According to many prominent interpretations, both Jewish and Christian, the love imagery of the poem is metaphorical for God's love for His people.
94* LoveTriangle: An alternate interpretation is that the Shulamite's Beloved ''isn't'' actually Solomon, but a shepherd, and the whole story plays out as the Shulamite dealing with [[RichSuitorPoorSuitor two suitors]] vying for her attention.
95* MarryForLove: If the LoveTriangle interpretation is to be believed, the Shulamite at the end of the story rejects King Solomon in favor of the shepherd, saying to the effect that [[MoneyIsNotPower all the money in the world wouldn't be enough to buy her love]].
96* MarshmallowHell: Poetically implied in Song 1:13:
97-->''A bundle of myrrh is my well-beloved unto me; he shall lie all night betwixt my breasts.'' (King James Version)
98* MistakenForProstitute: The Shulamite in the first chapter worries that her Beloved is going to mistake her for "one who veils herself", which in that time period is usually the sign of a prostitute.
99* MoneyIsNotPower: The Shulamite in Song 8:7 says "If a man offered for love all the wealth of his house, it would be utterly condemned."
100* NotWearingPantsDream: Song 5:3, if what was going on at that point was the Shulamite having an EroticDream:
101-->''I had taken off my garment;\
102how could I put it on again?\
103I had bathed my feet;\
104how could I soil them?''
105* OddballInTheSeries: This book is notably different from any of the other books in The Bible. It is a highly erotic love poem (even if many modern readers won't understand all the innuendo), which has [[JesusTaboo no mention of God]]. Traditionally, it has been believed that King Solomon wrote it. But still, some people have argued that this book should not be taken at face value, but rather as an allegory for the bond between God and Israel, or maybe for the bond between Christ and the Church. Because it can be hard to see why it should be in the Bible otherwise.
106* OneTrueLove: The Shulamite and the Beloved, to each other.
107* PluckyGirl: The Shulamite, who would risk being beaten by "the watchmen of the walls" in order to go after her Beloved when he pays her a visit at night. [[OrWasItADream Or maybe she was just dreaming he was there.]]
108* PoliceBrutality: What the Shulamite goes through with the watchmen in Song 5:7 could be interpreted as this.
109-->''The watchmen found me\
110as they went about the city;\
111they struck me, they wounded me;\
112they took away my mantle,\
113those watchmen of the walls.''
114* PoorMansPorn: This book is usually labeled as this, of the religious type.
115* PropertyOfLove: The Shulamite first says, "My beloved is mine, and I am his." Later on she says, "I am my beloved's, and his desire is for me."
116* RichSuitorPoorSuitor: King Solomon (the rich suitor) and the shepherd (the poor suitor) in the LoveTriangle interpretation of this book.
117* RoyalHarem: In Song 6:8, the Beloved says there are "sixty queens and eighty concubines, and virgins without number."
118* SexIsGood: This book in the Bible is very pro-sex, although the Shulamite does repeatedly say "do not awaken, nor arouse my love, until he pleases."
119* SexyDiscretionShot: Chapter 4 cuts out just before the couple gets it on.
120* SleepsInTheNude: Implied in Song 5:3 when the Shulamite hears the Beloved knocking on her door late at night and she is thinking, "I have taken off my robe -- how can I put it back on?"
121* SmellsSexy:
122** The Shulamite starts it off with Song 1:3:
123--->''Your anointing oils are fragrant,\
124your name is oil poured out;\
125therefore the virgins love you.''
126** The Beloved in Song 4:10-11:
127--->''How fair is your love, my sister, my bride!\
128How much better than wine is your love,\
129and the fragrance of your oils than any spice!\
130Your lips drip honey, my bride;\
131honey and milk are under your tongue;\
132and the fragrance of your garments is like the scent of Lebanon.''
133** The Shulamite in Song 4:16:
134--->''Wake up, North Wind.\
135South Wind, blow on my garden;\
136fill the air with fragrance.\
137Let my lover come to his garden\
138and eat the best of its fruits.'' (Good News Translation)
139** The Beloved says in Song 7:8 that the scent of the Shulamite's breath is like apples.
140** In the Message translation, the Shulamite woman says [[ManlyFacialHair her Beloved's beard]] smells like sage.
141* TitleDrop: Song 1:1 usually has "The song of songs, which is Solomon's." The title itself is a Hebrew idiom for "the most wonderful song of all."
142* WhatBeautifulEyes: The Beloved makes a big deal out of how beautiful the Shulamite's eyes are in very descriptive ways. The Shulamite returns the compliment by saying how beautiful her Beloved's eyes are.
143* WorldsMostBeautifulWoman: The Shulamite, according to her Beloved. The Shulamite compliments that her Beloved is "white and ruddy" and that he stands out among ten thousand.

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