D. B. DEVILLIERS

Poetry

Tag: poem

ursa minor

you see another out in the nowhere
where by rights there should be none
and what are they doing out here
well
what am I doing out here.

the bear is more afraid of you
than you are of it.
and the man thinks the bear thinks:
the man is more afraid of tooth and claw
than I am of 165 grain soft nosed bullets

and the bear thinks: well of course
because you know what claws are.
what the fuck is a bullet.

in the starstudded absolute wilderness.
ancient light through the spangled lid of the
ancient vault. beyond the firmament curtain
what terrible light. winking shuttles weave
weft and warp between here and forever.

through telescope lens I, the bear,
placidly contemplate portents in
muzzle flash.

ships of stone

it’s later than you think and it’s
farther than you’d think. it’s
farther than you’d
think and it’s far
far later than you
think.

8/30/2025
a nightmare.
approaching light speed this vessel may
distance time itself and shall yet contain
the aching void searing behind my
eyes it is too late, and my back though sturdy shall
bow beneath it as my mouth spits smoke and
bonedust and copper petals wilt redly dewed
from hindbrain stem in the dead false dawn and the
words it has always been too late the words from the
freshly hewn mouth within my mouth from the
very night I was born it was always too late
these godawful words they
pour thickly and congeal
and turn rust
by
morning.

wake.
what silly morbidity to wake to.
it seems I’ll not outgrow it.

men cut stone from the mountain.

pull across the known world. toil. labor.
to raise an obelisk against the sky.
the pharaoh would fuck the gods.
compromise in monumental
erection. and as in all such cases of
compromise, each concerned party feeling
cheated, war is not averted but merely
postponed.

men extract tannins from galls of oak.
combine with iron sulfate in preparation of ink.
the poet would use this in an attempt to cheat death.
to approximate love and beauty in verse.
death cheats back and steals both, leaving only words.
it falls then incumbent upon the reader to render.

men cut stone from the mountain.

build cities, shipyards, pads of concrete
from which objects are fired into orbit or
beyond. there is a factory on the other side of the
world where the keys with which I write these words
were injection-molded and packed and shipped to another
for final assembly by machines built and operated by
people whose names I will never know and whose
lives I cannot imagine.

there is a factory ten miles down the road
where I fix machines that make things for people
whose names I will never know and whose
lives I cannot imagine. checking the time, I find
as usual that it is later than I thought.

struck dumb by the abundantly evident impossible
density and complexity of every single thing—
or, in a word,
love—
one hopes for better dreams.

inhibited

dumbly staring as usual through the
wrong end of the telescope I run
out of words and I run
out of breath and I
run

in circles in circles her eyes too in circles
in lenses in circles and what could they
behold, turning
elliptically and tearing to pieces from misload
and mine groan from hers to the sky to the floor
moved by worn and rusted clockwork
metal on creaking metal wanting
badly for grease

or the problem of course is not in my eyes or
the muscles that move them but in what
resides behind them.

I rub shampoo into my skull and contemplate troubles within.
impulses electrical, chemical. inhibition of reuptake and
myelin deterioration. dead spots from oxygen deprivation.
in both hands I hold these words and others too

sprouting ginger shoots. a wild thing.
it sometimes still can dream.

A Town Repeated Elsewhere

reflection in a black brackish oilslick
full spectrum of visible light
a nice thing—beautiful even
but only if you don’t know what it is

cars cut parallel tracks into the street
rainwater on asphalt snick snick wish
jewel studs off mirrorwings bleed into
piss yellow saltlighted night
the distance enormous each pace
asymptotic double that of the next

rain to sleet to snow and all quiets
speckled orange orbs delineate the
passage of each hundred paces or so
neon the entranceways and the
drivers never meet my wandering eye

this awful dead coaltown top of a gash in
the world cut a hundred and fifty years ago
my great great grandfather nine years
old probably with the stereotype brogue
(and why not, for the purposes of a poem)
picking slate sharp out the breaker four
thousand miles from starved home.
compressed carbonic prehistoric life matter
drug cartwise out the bloodslaked
appalachian stone.

the world abounds with terrible places and
this one is maybe a lesser one. you’d
never know anything
ever happened here but it did
didn’t it. it did

like a half finished thought midway caught
irresolute
to no great purpose.

antechamber to the throne

across breadth and depth beyond reckoning
its trajectory these billion years plotted

little worlds trail tethered stars equally
predestined pedestrian slotted

in mindless gyration, horribly lumbering
mocking mimicry up and down

to the preterite chiral makeup
of small life likewise bound—

trepidatious feverdreamt tiptoeing toward
mock cosmic illusory godhood.

the player, selling the show, does believe
for a moment he’s henry v

who might have really believed for a moment
he might have been some kind of king.

the planets chock back from imagination
into stoneset timeworn slots

the player when the lamps shut quits stage
to lie in drink, sometimes love, and in rot

and of the king
the king…

trivial events in non-trivial systems

wisdom is the alchemical product of
knowledge and pain
over time.
lots of time.

it’s a long walk in a circle.
it’s the realization that you will repeat
your mistakes, and in realizing, firmly
resolve otherwise, which promptly-broken
resolution is of course a mistake
repeatedly made.
it’s the terror that your children will not
merely repeat your mistakes, but will make
worse ones, and that you’ll stand there
baffled at the door at four in the
morning, the shock of course
rehearsed hundreds of times in each of the
hundreds of nights before.

there is nothing new under
this old sun, as they say.
god you’d think you’d learn.
one grows generally towards understanding
in the long run I think that must be true
but meandering runs the road thereto.

it’s a break through the wall
after years of arduous chipping and
tunneling into space
antecedent to another larger wall.
long ago nature in its dynamic brilliance
allowed over time for longer-legged bipeds
to traverse walltop-to-top in single strides
like circus performers.
or it’s nice to imagine it might have been so.
if it can be imagined to have been,
maybe it can be imagined to repeat.
but it’s also easy enough to imagine
a terribly tall wall.

god you’d think you’d learn
but you’d be wrong.
ha ha
ha
you’d be wrong.

swing and a miss

she said
you don’t know how to talk to girls
and I said
trying to sound cocky I guess
sometimes I wish that were true.

she was right and she was wrong.
I don’t know how to talk to
anyone.

On The Interior Lives of Insects


I don’t know but I do know that when I
know I’ll know it

the world spins faster and faster, flattens
to a disc, a symbol applied like a grinding wheel to
rustspots in the larger frame of things
but the wheel won’t beat the rate of rot
and we are drifting much too far apart
where light cannot cross
and the wheel fragments in a shatter of shooting
stars.

descriptors of set and scene.
the sun goes up and down and up and
down the world wobbles like a child’s
toy at the end of its tether and now it is
fall and now it is spring and now it is
summer and now it is all wrong—
the deer have dropped their
horns and the leaves have leapt and
everything of course is the same in its
perpetual flux
send me won’t you please
the sun cuts a pale ribbon bisecting blue
days from nights flickering manic like a strobe light.

hands of clocks like fanblades
like the whirring workpiece on a lathe
into which one finds oneself drawn screaming by
hair or shirtsleeve, pulled headlong through the
vast unhesitating machinery of time
whose drive passes unacknowledged
this howl to endless tandem suns in one
great streak, issued already flat
from a form yet young but
already dust
send me to heaven

some words you write just to shout
and until then they lay there dead on the page
and who knows what happens to them after that.
the ghosts in my knotted soul will quiet
for a while.
dawn comes, I guess, and you
carry on.
that’s what you do.

Trinity

if for a moment you can breathe, steady
your spinning head
hold this solitary thought:

a moment might drop by and
say hi
say hi back.

the world is old and heavy
resilient
in its image we might be made.

you know what this cost. you paid.
you earned what it cost.
this is how this is supposed to work.

we scratch around bugwise on its
skin. lush forest and oceansweat salt skin.
everyone wants to be part of something larger

and we are. all of us, we are.
in this moment, and there only ever was
this one, we are.

the world is so rich and vast and true
and you are so integral
a part of it.

broken, us, skittering off thrown across the ice
towards our respective indefinite destinations
the great beautiful dark. what sounds carry

in the one moment. steady breath.
the only real love poem
I ever wrote.

framing to obscure edges

the poet affects practiced inflections
as he reads, giving the impression that the
words only just now came to him
on the spot
nicer genesis than the dusty subterranean
stonedrunk unwashed tombroom
into which they were actually birthed
prematurely, always
screaming
feebly and
sickly thin.