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- 4. I Am Black, But Comely, O Ye Daughters Of Jerusalem, As The Tents Of Kedar, As The Curtains Of Solomon.
4. I am black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, as the tents of Kedar, as the curtains of Solomon.
But, nevertheless, I am comely as the tents of Kedar; for this experimental knowledge of what I am, is extremely pleasing to my Bridegroom, and induces Him to visit me as a place of rest. I am comely, because, having no voluntary [11] stain, my Spouse renders me fair with His own beauty. The blacker I am in my own eyes, the fairer I am in His.
I am comely, too, as the curtains of Solomon, The curtains of the divine Solomon are the holy Humanity, which conceals the Word of God made flesh. I am comely, she says, as His curtains, for He has made me a partaker of His beauty in this, that as the holy Humanity concealed the Divinity, so my apparent blackness hides the greatness of God's workings in my soul.
I am black also from the crosses and persecutions which attack me from without; but I am comely as the curtains of Solomon, because blackness and the cross make me like Him.
I am black because outward weaknesses [12] appear in me, but I am comely, because my intention is pure within.