al-Mutanabbī (born 915 ce, Kūfah, Iraq—died Sept. 23, 965, near Dayr al-ʿĀqūl) was a poet regarded by many as the greatest of the Arabic language. He primarily wrote panegyrics in a flowery, bombastic, and highly influential style marked by improbable metaphors.
Al-Mutanabbī was the son of a water carrier who claimed noble and ancient southern Arabian descent. Because of his poetic talent, al-Mutanabbī received an education. When Shīʿite Qarmatians sacked Kūfah in 924, he joined them and lived among the Bedouin, learning their doctrines and Arabic. Claiming to be a prophet—hence the name al-Mutanabbī (“The Would-Be Prophet”)—he led a Qarmatian revolt in Syria in 932. After its suppression and two years’ imprisonment, he recanted in 935 and became a wandering poet.
He began to write panegyrics in the tradition established by the poets Abū Tammām and al-Buḥturī. A panegyric on the military victories of Sayf al-Dawlah, the Ḥamdānid poet-prince of northern Syria, resulted in al-Mutanabbī’s attaching himself to the ruler’s court in 948. During his time there, al-Mutanabbī lauded his patron in panegyrics that rank as masterpieces of Arabic poetry. Among his lines of praise for Sayf al-Dawlah are ones written after the prince’s recovery from illness:
Light is now returned to the sun; previously it was extinguished,
As though the lack of it in a body were a kind of disease.
The latter part of this period was clouded with intrigues and jealousies that culminated in al-Mutanabbī’s leaving Syria in 957 for Egypt, then ruled in name by the Ikhshīdids. Al-Mutanabbī attached himself to the regent, the Ethiopian eunuch Abū al-Misk Kāfūr, who had been born a slave. But he offended Kāfūr by lampooning him in scurrilous satirical poems and fled Egypt about 960. After further travels—including to Baghdad, where he was unable to secure patronage, and to Kūfah, where he again defended the city from attack by the Qarmatians—al-Mutanabbī lived in Shīrāz, Iran, under the protection of the emir ʿAḍūd al-Dawlah of the Būyid dynasty until 965, when he returned to Iraq and was killed by bandits near Baghdad.
Al-Mutanabbī’s pride and arrogance set the tone for much of his verse, which is ornately rhetorical yet crafted with consummate skill and artistry. He gave to the traditional qaṣīdah, or ode, a freer and more personal development, writing in what can be called a neoclassical style that combined some elements of Iraqi and Syrian stylistics with classical features.