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 xxxi. 23 ('the elders of the land') we may perhaps infer that it was written in Palestine. It is very interesting to see the ideal of womanhood formed by a late Hebrew poet. Activity appears to him the one great feminine virtue—not however the activity which is entirely devoted to trifling details, for the ideal woman 'is like the ships of the merchant; from far she brings her food' (ver. 14). Nor is she a stranger to sympathetic impulses; 'she holds out her hand (with something in it) to the afflicted, and stretches forth her hands to the needy [to bring them in],' ver. 20. Nor must we forget 'one of the most beautiful features in the portrait' (Delitzsch): 'she opens her mouth with wisdom, and a law of kindness is on her tongue' (ver. 26). But for this verse, indeed, it would read almost like satire that 'far above pearls is her value' (ver. 10), since no higher estimate than this has been offered for God's choicest blessing, 'Wisdom.'

The poet does not say that he has found such a woman (comp. Eccles. vii. 28). The picture is perhaps too brightly coloured to be drawn from reality, unless with Hitzig we bring down the composition of the poem as late as the Greek period. Most probably, it is idealistic.