The Bedouin’s Many Wives



I kissed my sweetheart by the caravan
The camels all did wink their roving eyes
Out on the dunes of the hot desert sands
We both confessed our hopes for Paradise.

Another came presenting spice and dates
And yet another, with gold from the trade
I found that these three made for goodly mates
As we sat down beneath the palmtree shade.

Just then, another came singing a song
And yet another, dancing to her tune
From these five I could not escape the throng
Of being considered Fortune’s buffoon.

As even now, their marriage suits me well
I have these great companions’ tale-to-tell.

About this poem

This is a sonnet about adventures in the middle east. This culture has fascinated me for some time.

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Written on May 31, 2023

Submitted by NightingalePrince on May 31, 2023

Modified by NightingalePrince on June 06, 2023

33 sec read
125

Quick analysis:

Scheme XXXX ABAB CDCD EE
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 589
Words 110
Stanzas 4
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 2

Benjamin Brantley

Benjamin Brantley is an unpublished American poet, whose stylings are akin to those of the 16th-19th century, particularly those of Shakespearean reflection, a friend of the descendants of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and a military veteran. He has experienced both fatherland and motherland (Germany, and Great Britain), as a recipient of divine mercies after the empathetic compassions of his Master, Jesus Christ, the Savior of the world. more…

All Benjamin Brantley poems | Benjamin Brantley Books

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Discuss the poem The Bedouin’s Many Wives with the community...

2 Comments
  • amandak
    Great write!
    LikeReply9 months ago
  • Bethaisha
    Very nice, makes me think of Arabian nights.
    LikeReply9 months ago
    • NightingalePrince
      glad you liked it. I enjoy Arabian Nights very much
      LikeReply9 months ago

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"The Bedouin’s Many Wives" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2025. Web. 20 Mar. 2025. <https://www.poetry.com/poem/160453/the-bedouin’s-many-wives>.

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