Carlos Izzia Ahmad: The Man And His Poetry - An Essay by Omale Allen Abdul-Jabbar
- By Omale Allen Abdul-Jabbar
- Published July 16, 2007
- Essays
- Unrated
PRISONER OF HOPE (1985). Continues on the same subject, now bothering on the undying nature of the human spirit: HOPE!
(1st Stanza): … Holding tight to my dreams of you.
(2nd Stanza): All these years together
And we’re still strangers
The hurt and pains are what we share.
FARIDA (1994), he also named this NA’OMI, also NASIHA. He talked very compassionately about this one. I remember trekking down once from a reading at
1st Stanza: When like ghosts dead love rise
To press on us the Braille dots of memory
And the shadowy mouth of a sorceress
Shall prescribe obscure cures and remedies
When fate like a classic concertmaster
Shall spread his overtures and tins wares…
2nd Stanza: You will walk down the blue river
With a pebble under your tongue
Lending sulphurus heat to fire
… Prophecies shall die on your lips.
“Haka! Haka!” nodding his head, Obu Udeozo would respond to lines like this one. And you? Does your soul gravitate towards the above as does mine? Please check yourself in you feel nothing, for poetry should evoke such in you.
BLUE ANGEL (1991). A simple celebration of; Life. And urge, a call for freedom of the Spirit: (2nd Stanza)
Blue Angel
Leave Sorrow till tomorrow
But tonight let the cup of joy overflow
(Last Stanza)
Hide a fallin’ tear with you wing
They that went out weepin’
Let them come in rejoicin’
VAGABOUND HEART (1993)
It is said once, that the “Heart has it’s own reasons that reason knows nothing about” And this very poem amply augments that axiom. Perhaps you already have love, have flown on that nuptial flight (as I’m about to…) or steady in a relationship or have simply vowed, never to love again (which I think is terrible by the way, for we must always love again), but hey! That’s your heart suddenly set a – roaming. And there’s not a damn thing you can do about it. Cupid?
Izzia Confesses herein:
Wish I could love you from before the flood
Till well after the second coming of the Jew
… like the wrigglin’ warm loves the flesh of you Time and time again, I lay my life on the line.
But, baby, I’m cheated every time by this
Vagabond Heart of mine.
Sweet beauteous Poetry:
Wish I could take you home as my wife
Pay allegiance with all my soul to you alone
Wish I could be faithful to you all my life
… but a fatal impulse keeps thwartin’ me
This Vagabond Heart will be the end of me.
THE LAWGIVER (1993)
Here, the religious. And the Christian in Izzia betrays itself:
This is the hour of the lawless one
It will be till the Lawgiver Comes
The Prophet was by my window
To give his word of warnin’
He said, beware of the creepin’ shadow
I see the dog-star ascendin’
Fevers will burn in many brains
To drive many insane.
Izzia urges us to take heed, stay strong. Do not be led astray.
BLOOD (1993) addresses the innate in Kilt and Kin. This, he treated in many guises, but with reference to Cain and Abel in the 6th Stanza
I heard the first thunderclap
I saw noble Abel Slain
I saw the silver Cord Snap
And my soul hears the mark of Cain.