Song of Songs 1:11
a neck bande of golde wil we make ye wt syluer bottons.
a neck bande of golde wil we make ye wt syluer bottons.
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9There wil I tary for the (my loue) wt myne hoost & with my charettes, which shalbe no fewer then Pharaos.
10Then shal thy chekes & thy neck be made fayre, & hanged wt spages & goodly iewels:
10I gaue the chaunge of raymentes, I made the shues of Taxus lether: I gyrthed ye aboute wt white sylcke, I clothed the with kerchues,
11I decked the wt costly apparell, I put rynges vpon thy fyngers: a chayne aboute thy necke,
12spages vpo thy foreheade, eare rynges vpon thyne eares, & set a beutifull crowne vpon thine heade.
13Thus wast thou deckte with syluer & golde, & thy rayment was of fyne white sylke, of nedle worke & of dyuerse colours. Thou didest eate nothinge but symnels, honny & oyle: maruelous goodly wast thou & beutifull, yee euen a very Quene wast thou:
9for that shal brynge grace vnto thy heade, & shalbe a cheyne aboute thy necke.
19and colares, bracelettes and hooues,
20ye goodly floured, wyde and broderd raymet, brusshes and headbandes,
21rynges and garlades,
12When the kynge sytteth at the table, he shal smell my Nardus:
3Thy lippes are like a rose coloured rybende, thy wordes are louely: thy chekes are like a pece of a pomgranate, besydes that which lyed hyd within.
4Thy neck is like the tower of Dauid buylded with bulworkes, wher vpon there hage a thousande sheldes, yee all the weapes of the giautes.
13His chekes are like a garden bedd, where in the Apotecaryes plate all maner of swete thinges: His lippes droppe as the floures of the most pryncipall Myrre,
14his hades are full of golde rynges and precious stones. His body is as the pure yuery, decte ouer with Saphyres:
10the pilers are of syluer, the coueringe of golde, ye seate of purple, ye grounde pleasauntly paued for the doughters of Ierusalem.
11Go forth (o ye doughters of Sion) and beholde kynge Salomon in the crowne, wherwith his mother crowned him in the daye of his mariage, and in the daye of the gladnesse of his hert.
19Shal the caruer make him a carued ymage? and shal the goldsmyth couer him with golde, or cast him in to a fourme of syluer plates?
9She shal make the a gracious heade, and garnish the with ye crowne of glory.
8Thou hast loued rightuousnesse, & hated iniquite: wherfore God (which is thy God) hath anoynted the with the oyle of gladnes aboue thy felowes.
9All thy garmentes are like myrre, Aloes & Cassia, when thou comest out of thine yuerie palaces in thy beutifull glory.
13The doughters of Tyre shal be there with giftes, the riche amonge the people shal make their supplicacion before the.
14The kynges doughter is all glorious within, hir clothinge is of wrought golde.
13Thou shalt make hokes of golde also,
14and two wrethe cheynes of pure golde, and shalt fasten them vnto the hokes.
9Yf she be a wall, we shal buylde a syluer bollworke there vpon: Yf she be a tower, we shal festen her with bordes of Cedre tre.
11and ouerlayed it with fyne golde, and made therto a crowne of golde rounde aboute,
12and made vnto it an whoope of an hande bredth hye, and made a crowne of golde rounde aboute the whoope.
12thy wyndowes off Cristall, thi gates of fyne cleare stone, & yi borders of pleasaut stones.
1O how pleasaunt are thy treadinges with thy shues, thou prynces daughter? Thy thees are like a fayre iewell, which is wrought by a connynge workmaster:
24and ouerlaye it with pure golde, and make a crowne of golde rounde aboute it,
25and an whope of an hade brede hye, and a crowne of golde vnto ye whope rounde aboute.
22And vpon the brestlappe thou shalt make wrethen cheynes by ye corners of pure golde, and two golde rynges,
9namely, wod, syluer, which is brought out of Tharsis, and beate to plates: and golde from Ophir, a worke yt is made with the honde of the craftesman & the caster, clothed with yalow sylck and scarlet: euen so is the worke of their wyse men all together.
15And vpon the brestlappe they made wrythen cheynes of pure golde,
9Thou hast wouded my hert (o my sister, my spouse) thou hast wounded my hert, with one of thine eyes, and with one cheyne of thy neck.
4Thy neck is as it were a tower of yuery: Thyne eyes are like ye water poles in Hesebon, besyde the porte of Bathrabbim: Thy nose is like the tower of Libanus, which loketh towarde Damascus:
5That heade that stondeth vpon the is like Carmel: The hayre of thy heade is like the kynges purple folden vp in plates.
11this shalt thou ouerleye with pure golde within and without, & make an hye vpo it a crowne of golde rounde aboute,
7Thy chekes are like a pece of a pomgranate, besydes yt which lyeth hid within.
6and ouerlayed the house with precious stones to beutifye it. As for the golde, it was golde of Paruaim.
39Out of an hundreth pounde weight of pure golde shalt thou make it, with all this apparell.
3Whose apparell shal not be outwarde wt broyded heer, & hanginge on of golde, or in puttynge on of gorgious araye,
4yee that same moueth me also to renne after the. The kynge hath brought me into his preuy chambre. We wil be glad & reioyce in the, we thynke more of thy brestes then of wyne: well is them that loue the.
11Herken (o doughter) considre, & enclyne thine eare: forget thine owne people, & thy fathers house.
24He shal geue the an haruest, which in plenty & abundaunce shall exceade the dust of the earth, and the golde of Ophir like ryuer stones.
10Then arme thy self with thine owne power, vp, decke the in thy ioly araye,
15A mouth of vnderstodinge is more worth then golde, many precious stones, and costly Iewels.
2My tonge is ye penne of a ready wryter.
11A worde spoken in due season, is like apples of golde in a syluer dyshe.