“Solomon had a vineyard at Baal Hamon; he gave the vineyard to the guards; a man would bring for its fruit a thousand silver pieces” (Song of Songs 8:11). “Solomon had a vineyard” – this is Israel, as it is stated: “For the vineyard of the Lord of hosts is the house of Israel” (Isaiah 5:7). “Solomon [Shlomo] had” – the King [of whom it may be said] that peace [shalom] is His. “At Baal Hamon” – hamon baal,37The simple reading of the verse is that Baal Hamon is the name of a place.
The midrash interprets this name as though it were written hamon baal. for they streamed [hamu] after the Baal, just as you say: “They worshipped the Be’alim and the Ashtarot” (Judges 10:6). Therefore the hordes [hamonot] beset them. He positioned guards over them.38This is an expounding of the phrase: “He gave the vineyard to the guards.” “A man would bring for its fruit a thousand silver pieces” – He brought a man upon His fruit,39God brought Nebuchadnezzar upon His people. and he found there a thousand righteous men impeccable in Torah and good deeds.
Another matter: “A vineyard [kerem]” – this is Israel, as it is stated: “I brought you to a fruitful [karmel] land” (Jeremiah 2:7), “a land that the Lord your God cares for” (Deuteronomy 11:12). “Solomon [Shlomo] had” – the King [of whom it may be said] that peace [shalom] is His. “At Baal Hamon” – for they streamed [hamu] after the multitudes of hordes of kingdoms. That is what is written: “I saw among the spoils a fine Babylonian garment” (Joshua 7:21).
Rabbi Ḥanina bar Yitzḥak said: A Babylonian cloak. What was Babylon doing here? Rabbi Shimon ben Yoḥai taught: It was [from] the king of Babylon, and he acquired in Jericho.40He dispatched his viceroy to reside there. One would send dates to the other, and one would send gifts to the other.
That is to say that any king who did not have a representative in the Land of Israel did not perceive himself as a king. “He gave the vineyard to the guards” – this is Nebuchadnezzar. “A man would bring for its fruit a thousand silver pieces” – He brought a man upon His fruit, and he gathered from them a thousand righteous men impeccable in Torah and good deeds. That is what is written: “The craftsmen and the smiths one thousand” (II Kings 24:16).41This is a reference to the class of spiritual leadership that was exiled with Yehoyakhin eleven years before the destruction of the Temple. The craftsmen were a thousand, and the smiths were a thousand; the Rabbis say: Both together were a thousand.