What’s the attraction?
i’m thinking here about those times when you read something acclaimed, and you just can’t understand why it is so. it’s just for fun – the idea being not so much to put the boot in to some famous writers as to reveal our own foibles
i’ll go for this couplet from Leisure by W H Davies. the poem is number 11 in the Nation’s Favourite 100:
No time to see, in broad daylight,
Streams full of stars, like skies at night
reason being that it includes at least 3 of my bug-bears: an ordinary rhyme [which on its own might be ok], run of the mill imagery, and the dreaded stars reference [why DO stars crop up in so many poems?]. the 2nd line could almost be an attempt to use every word that is over-used in poetry
so any examples of writing that makes you wonder what everyone else can see in it? and better still if you can explain why you seem to be in the minority of people that don’t rate it
oh, and apologies to the poem’s fans. i think there are some on the site. like I said, it’s a thread to reveal something of ourselves, rather than annoy people