[Quam pulchra es et quam decora carissima in deliciis statura tua assimilata est pal]mae et ubera tua botris caput tuum ut Carmelus collum tuum sicut turris et burnea veni dilecte mi ingrediamur in agrum videamus si florent fructus parturie(runt si) et germinassent mala punica ibi dabo tibi ubera mea alleluia | euouae < eae
A late, quasi-tonal Marian antiphon likely to be in the F-mode (the differentia pertains to mode 6, but the melody often hovers well above it, spanning more than an octave). More precise melodic identification proves however very difficult for several reasons: the musical scribe is rather imprecise in heightening the various notes in relation to the red staff as well as in differentiating lozenges (indicating the semitones) from squares; this melodic version is currently not found in any other digitized Cantus source (although some degree of relatedness is appreciable in some points to other variants whose final is safely on F); the alleluia does not seem to be consistent with the rest of the antiphon (it is not to rule out a scribal error in regard to the very last pitches and/or the alleluia not actually being the end the piece but being followed by an unspecified reprise).