Song of Songs 3:6
Who is this that cometh out of the wilderness like pillars of smoke, perfumed with myrrh and frankincense, with all powders of the merchant?
Cross-reference
Song of Solomon 4:12-14 explicitly names myrrh and frankincense — the exact spices that perfume the smoke of this procession.
Song 8:5 uses the same question 'Who is this coming up from the wilderness?' describing the beloved pair.
Song 4:10 continues the same imagery: the bride's perfume surpasses all spices — directly building on the fragrant procession here.
Song 6:10 opens with the same rhetorical 'Who is this...' and describes the beloved's majestic appearance — a structural parallel within the book.
Song of Solomon 1:13 features myrrh as a sachet, the same spice that perfumes the column of smoke here.
Song of Solomon 5:5 again uses myrrh, the spice that perfumes the column of smoke here.
Song of Solomon 5:13 has liquid myrrh, the same spice that perfumes the procession's smoke.
Psalm 45:8 describes a royal wedding with fragrant myrrh, aloes, and cassia — directly paralleling the perfumed bride in this wedding procession.
Exodus 30:34 lists frankincense and other fragrant spices for the holy incense — the same perfumes that adorn the bride here.