Page:The Song of Songs (1857).djvu/68

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had the choice to eat of the tree of life, he might have eaten and lived for ever, without mortification or trouble; as it is written, "Behold, I have set before thee life and good, and death and evil: choose, therefore, of the life, that thou mayest live" (Deut. xxx. 15). This represents one who endeavours to learn wisdom in its order, but is afraid lest he should be terrified when looking up to God, seeing that his fruit is not yet ripe. This is the meaning of what is said in the section, "Turn, my beloved, and be thou like a gazelle or a young hind upon the mountains of separation" (Song of Songs ii. 17); and again, "Catch us the foxes, the little foxes, that destroy the vineyards; for our vineyards are in blossom" (ibid. 15). This teaches that the fruit was not yet ripe. There is no mention in this first section that the shepherdess did eat of the fruit. Her saying, "I desired to sit down under its shade, and its fruit is sweet to my taste" (Song of Songs ii. 3), merely declares her desire, which is evident from the word [HE:Hmdty]. The expression [HE:pryv] is here used in the sense of words, wisdom, and instruction. The whole, therefore, of the first section refers to the mind of man when still young, prior to its developing the end for which its existence was designed, and when the powers of the body have still the dominion over it, for he has not pursued his studies farther than mathematics and physics. This first section is again subdivided into two parts. The first part begins chap. i. 2, and ends ii. 7, and represents one who fears God and shuns evil; but his knowledge of God is derived from tradition, and has no wisdom of his own. And the second part (chap. ii. 8 to iii. 1) represents one who has studied mathematics and physics.

The second section (chap, iii. 1, v. 1) represents one who has found the virtuous woman whose desire is to her husband, and who seeks her beloved while upon her couch, and in whom her husband may safely trust; that is, a mind which has brought out its possibility into reality, and has, as it were, stretched out its hand and taken of the tree of life, and eaten, and lives for ever. This is meant by the declaration in this section, "Scarcely had I passed them, when I found him whom my soul loveth. I seized him, and would not let him go, till I brought him into the house of my mother,


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