(2) Compared with other nationalities, Arab classical poetry has strong improvisation, impulsiveness and superficial thoughts. Their poet is unwilling and not good at deliberation. They don't write poems seriously, but improvise. Therefore, Arab poetry is often neurotic and emotional, with more words than thoughts, more emotion than reason, and more impulse than restraint. They can't think and observe things and phenomena comprehensively. When they see something and think of something, they write poems. Therefore, their poems have no strict logical structure and ideological context.
(3) Arab poetry lacks rich imagination, probably because the monotonous desert environment limits the imagination of Arab poets. Their poetic images are usually composed of several things they are most familiar with, namely desert, grassland, camel, horse and so on. Their narrow imagination makes their poems lack vivid metaphors, and their themes, themes and styles are repetitive and monotonous from generation to generation.
(4) Arabic poetry is very practical and utilitarian. Poetry in the age of ignorance is also used to record and publicize the poet himself, encourage tribal unity, satirize and attack the enemy, and be used for love and social interaction. Poetry after the unification of the empire closely served politics and religion. In order to gain fame and fortune, poets compete to flatter and speculate with their own poems. This tendency of instrumentalization of poetry hinders the further development of Arab poetry.