“All eyez” are on an acclaimed Canadian poet accused of plagiarizing Tupac Shakur, Maya Angelou and other noted authors and rappers.

The majority of poems in a book by the late laureate Pierre DesRuisseaux were lifted from other writers, UK-based wordsmith Ira Lightman told The Guardian.

“Any one individual who holds a copy of that book in their hands thinking those are original poems are wrong and aren’t doing proper credit to the original author,” Lightman told the Toronto Star Monday.

Lightman found that about 30 out of 50 poems were based on the works of others ranging from poet laureates to amateurs, and rappers.

One especially glaring copy was a poem entitled “J’avance” (I advance) that mimics, almost word for word, Angelou’s famed “I Rise.”

DesRuisseaux’s version reads: “You can wipe me from the pages of history/with your twisted falsehoods/you can drag me through the mud/but like the wind, I rise.”

While Angelou’s is: “You may write me down in history/With your bitter, twisted lies,/You may trod me in the very dirt/But still, like dust, I’ll rise.”

“I just don’t know what he was doing — whether he was randomly searching or putting in key words,” Lightman said.

A Montreal-based publisher announced Monday that it would remove the book from shelves, and said DesRuisseaux, who died in January 2016 at 70, suffered from a degenerative brain disorder that may have caused him to swipe other artist’s works without realizing.

“It’s sad not to talk to him about that [the plagiarism] and sad that he can’t answer back,” Lightman said. “I don’t want to bad-mouth the man or besmirch his reputation. There’s plenty of good work in his canon.”