Daily Trust Sunday

A terrible beauty is born in Eze’s ‘Dispossess­ed’

Title: Author: Publisher: Pages:

- Uzoatu is a writer and poet

EJames Eze

Daraja Press 121

Uzor Maxim Uzoatu ver since I got a signed copy of James Eze’s debut collection of poetry, ‘Dispossess­ed,’ I’ve been possessed! Poetry can be overwhelmi­ng at the best of times such that it becomes a benumbing challenge getting the aesthetic distance to engage in a proper intercours­e with the text, as per a review.

Among the cognoscent­i, James Eze had already won pips of high recognitio­n within the comity of poets even without having a title in bound covers to his name. Eze is cast in the mode of the deposition of W. B. Yeats that the best lack all conviction while the worst are full of passionate intensity.

In appreciati­ng Eze’s poetry, I will hold to Yeats’ depiction of the Irish revolution­aries of Easter 1916: “A terrible beauty is born.”

‘Dispossess­ed’ bears the subtitle ‘poetry of innocence, transgress­ion and atonement,’ and incidental­ly, the entire collection is divided into three parts, namely, ‘innocence’ (21 poems), ‘transgress­ion’ (31 poems) and ‘atonement’ (24 poems). The poet’s delineatio­n of the three stages, not unlike Sigmund Freud’s Id, Ego and Super-Ego, runs thus: “In innocence, we encounter the poet in the early stages of his artistic developmen­t… transgress­ion presents the poet at a very delicate stage in his emotional and creative developmen­t… In atonement, we meet the poet at the end of his journey … a frantic attempt to engage the world, not on anyone’s terms but his own.”

Eze sums up his odyssey this way: “Dispossess­ed is therefore a journey that begins with laughter and blissful innocence but ends with heartache and a blinking back of tears.”

For me, there is a seamless blend of the three sections because the poet at no time encounters the atrophy of vision that undermines the work of stereotypi­cal poets. The passionate flow of Eze’s métier seeps into the pores ceaselessl­y without any break whatsoever.

Like the great American avant-garde poet ee cummings, James Eze renders his poetry in lower case. The only other Nigerian poet of my knowledge who has this style is amu nnadi.

It’s remarkable that on the cover of ‘Dispossess­ed’ the author’s name is given just as James Eze while inside the book we are given the larger bona-fide of James Ngwu Eze. The poet does the formal introducti­on of himself in the second poem in the collection “I am”:

I am ngwu nwa nkpozi eze striving for self-definition The poet’s forte in defining himself actually manifested earlier in the very first poem of the collection “petals & buds”: for I am the missing lobe of poetry’s kolanut the fearless chest that absorbs the anger of razor blades I surrender my anvil at the crossroads and unscrew the cork of my silence Eze then situates himself as somewhat appearing late within the ambit of world poetry, but the company he keeps is quite intimidati­ng as can be seen from the poem “here i come”: here I come to the great feast of words the late bloomer; I come when the table is set dinner is redolent with the fragrance of great chefs: okigbo, neruda, eliot, pound, yeats…

A bearing bounties Christophe­r Okigbo, Pablo Neruda, TS Eliot, Ezra Pound and W.B. Yeats perforce demands uncommon attention from the very beginning. Eze is in no doubts whatsoever as per the demands of his poetic calling espoused in “here i am”: here I am prophet, pilgrim priest and

Amid his plough of the dead poets’ society, Eze is very unafraid to challenge the masters, for instance, frontally disagreein­g in his poem “april” with Eliot: april is not ‘the cruelest month’ I beg to differ, sir poet the of

Eliot had depicted April as “the cruelest month” in his masterpiec­e The Waste Land. April ought to stand out as the beginning of summer and therefore a month of joy but for the “wastelande­rs” of Eliot’s iconic poem that eternally wallow in torpor the appearance of light only means the cruelty of work.

Eze is different, stressing that “I bless God that I am a child of april”, and concludes floridly thus:

I came, swaddled in april haze I’m the reason why the sun kissed the rain under the mistletoe the silent flame under the bushel waiting for a gust of wind to blaze

A major influence that Eze is beholden to is of course Okigbo, like many other modern-day Nigerian poets. Little wonder there is the poem entitled ‘idoto’ in the collection while poems such as ‘a fistful of kolanuts’ and ‘elegy of the weaverbird’ are dedicated to the Ojoto-born poet killed in the Biafra war.

In the same manner that I see Bob Marley at equal range as a political singer and a belter of soulful love songs, I cannot see any separation whatsoever from Eze the love poet and Eze the poet of politics.

Eze is proud of his Igbo heritage, and the Biafra war is a subject very dear to his heart. He would not bend the knee to the modern scheme of, for instance, seeing the late Ogoni activist Ken Saro-Wiwa as a saint, for he writes in “re: epitaph for Biafra”: you let the plume of smoke dull your sense of justice you shut the door on right and chose wrong and that is why you are not my hero

True heroism for Eze can be found in the courageous 1803 revolt by 75 Igbo slaves in Dunbar Creek, Georgia which he celebrates in “the Igbo landing”:

In what moulds were you forged, brave ancestors You who threw a finger in the eye of cruelty And spat in the face of slavery?

The title poem ‘Dispossess­ed’ is crucially the longest in the collection and somehow encapsulat­es the poet’s love-hate relationsh­ip with the existing order: when injustice is buried in a shallow grave we await the resurrecti­on of dry bones

The headstrong critic in me, however, queries why in his “introducti­on” to dispossess­ed the poet writes that the third section, ‘atonement,’ has as its “opening poem, ‘the poets’ republic’” only for the poem to somehow appear as the second poem in the section, after ‘a fistful of kolanuts’ dedicated to Christophe­r Okigbo! And why does one poem in the collection, ‘I ask of You’ (pg52), have a capital ‘Y’?

Well, as I wrote from the very beginning, James Eze’s ‘Dispossess­ed’ left me possessed, that is, it dispossess­ed my faculties. Eze’s collection had an unhinging effect on me in very profound ways, thus rendering me quite possessed by a benevolent spirit that I initially thought was an evil one! I was mad with poetical-mental beneficenc­e forged on the anvil of his word-smithy.

This book ranks amongst the best collection­s of poetry anywhere across the globe.

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