Epithalamion

by Richard Bauckham

All our love is deeply (as a folk

tale in the memory of once upon

a time the golden-haired princess awoke

from spellbound slumbers to a carillon

of kisses) grounded in the depth of his

own dying.  For the risk of love we dare

(the peasant boy with rustic pleasantries

courted the princess of the golden hair)

because the tale is told (how she was brought

a virgin victim to the dragon's lair,

a bride self-bartered for her people's weal)

of love as strong as death (our hero fought

with death's dark reptile) that our hearts may bear

his true love as an everlasting seal.

Richard Bauckham

September 1946 –


  • Biblical scholar and theologian
  • Works cover the theology of Jürgen Moltmann, Christology (both New Testament and systematic), eschatology, the New Testament books of Revelation, James, 2 Peter and Jude, Jewish and Christian apocalyptic literature, and many others
  • Until 2007 was Professor of New Testament Studies at the University of St Andrews, Scotland
  • Is retired to work on writing and studies
  • Written poetry, and two story books for children about the MacBears of Bearloch
  • You've heard of him before

Poem Structure

  • 3 quatrains + 1 couplet = 14 lines
  • Regular rhyme scheme
  • Iambic pentameter

It's a Sonnetish!

Rhyme

All our love is deeply (as a folk A

tale in the memory of once upon B

a time the golden-haired princess awoke A

from spellbound slumbers to a carillon B

of kisses) grounded in the depth of his C

own dying.  For the risk of love we dare D

(the peasant boy with rustic pleasantries C

courted the princess of the golden hair) D


Rhyme cont.

because the tale is told (how she was brought E

a virgin victim to the dragon's lair, D

a bride self-bartered for her people's weal) F

of love as strong as death (our hero fought E

with death's dark reptile) that our hearts may bear D

his true love as an everlasting seal. F

Rhythm

iambic pentameter

All our love is deeply (as a folk
All | our love | is deep | ly (as | a folk
tale in the memory of once upon
tale | in the mem | or-y | of once | u-pon

Poem Analysis

Def: Epithalamium

a song or poem in honor of a bride and bridegroom.

Def: Carillon

a musical instrument that is typically housed in the bell tower (belfry) of a church or other municipal building

Def: Weal

that which is best for someone or something.

Weaves back and forth between metaphor (fairytale) and God's tireless love.

All our love is deeply (as a folk

tale in the memory of once upon

a time the golden-haired princess awoke

from spellbound slumbers to a carillon

of kisses) grounded in the depth of his

own dying.  For the risk of love we dare

(the peasant boy with rustic pleasantries

courted the princess of the golden hair)

because the tale is told (how she was brought

a virgin victim to the dragon's lair,

a bride self-bartered for her people's weal)

of love as strong as death (our hero fought

with death's dark reptile) that our hearts may bear

his true love as an everlasting seal.

Like Tolkien said to Lewis, the story of Christ is the myth that actually is true.

Epithalamion

By Timothy Krell

Epithalamion

An overview of the poem "Epithalamion" by Richard Bauckham.

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