Breasts, Roses, and the Mountain
Song of Solomon 4:5-6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Song of Solomon 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Plainly, the poem pairs intimate nourishment imagery with an invitation to ascend inward. It moves from the garden of lilies to an inner altar where light displaces shadows.
Neville's Inner Vision
Life, dear reader, this Song speaks not to bodies but to states of consciousness. The two breasts are twin wells of nourishment feeding the garden of your awareness, like two young roes among lilies. When it says, Until the day break, and the shadows flee away, it marks the moment a shift occurs in consciousness—when you withdraw from old images of lack and fear and ascend to a sacred altitude. The Mountain of Myrrh and the Hill of Frankincense symbolize the altar you build in imagination, an inner temple where fragrance becomes certainty. In Neville’s language, you do not seek answers outside; you awaken the I AM within and let it reign. The body’s imagery becomes a map, not a decree. By consciously choosing the feeling of the wish fulfilled—nourished by beauty, ascending to light—you reframe your inner world and invite the external as a seamless outgrowth of that state.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and dwell in the sense of nourished awareness. Assume you are already at the inner mountain, feel the fragrance, and let that state mantle your day.
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