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	<title>Joel Deutsch &#187; Woke Up, Fell Out of Bed: A Clutch of Random Poems</title>
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		<title>Standing and Waiting: A Triptych</title>
		<link>http://www.joeldeutsch.net/woke-up-fell-out-of-bed-a-clutch-of-random-poems/33-venice-a-triptych/</link>
		<comments>http://www.joeldeutsch.net/woke-up-fell-out-of-bed-a-clutch-of-random-poems/33-venice-a-triptych/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 May 2009 03:51:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Joel</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Woke Up, Fell Out of Bed: A Clutch of Random Poems]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[by Joel deutsch
1
a block away, the light turns green
and the bus starts forward again,
head sign scrolling route number, name and destination
over and over
like a TV news crawl
with nothing else left to report. 
It&#8217;s hot, very hot. 85, says a digital thermometer atop a bank.
The afternoon traffic crawls over scorching asphalt
Most windows rolled up tight to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by Joel deutsch<br />
1<br />
a block away, the light turns green<br />
and the bus starts forward again,<br />
head sign scrolling route number, name and destination<br />
over and over<br />
like a TV news crawl<br />
with nothing else left to report. </p>
<p>It&#8217;s hot, very hot. 85, says a digital thermometer atop a bank.<br />
The afternoon traffic crawls over scorching asphalt<br />
Most windows rolled up tight to hold in the A/C,<br />
the occasional open one blaring some kind of music.</p>
<p>Beside him at the bus stop are Two small, dark-haired women,<br />
identical twins in matching Disneyland T-shirts<br />
that hang untucked over thickening midriffs and the tops of stretch fabric jeans,<br />
one clutching the handles of a supermarket bag<br />
Crammed with rags, sponges and trigger-spray housecleaner, the other holding up a yellow umbrella, wide open,<br />
under the bright, cloudless sky. </p>
<p>The twin with the bag smiles  and he smiles back,<br />
Glancing sidelong at the other one, crunching his face to ask, wordlessly,<br />
why the umbrella?</p>
<p>Her eyes follow his to the object in question<br />
and back again. </p>
<p>.“My sister,” she says with a Spanish accent, a look of resignation<br />
and a small shrug, as if that<br />
explains everything.</p>
<p>Suddenly, there’s a din,the clatter of small hard wheels<br />
and sidewalk cracks. it&#8217;s a girl, 18 at the most<br />
 Tanned,, supple, hair tied back,<br />
clad in a cherry-red tank top, Baggy blue shorts and scuffed white sneakers<br />
Like a skateboarding American flag<br />
She flashes by with careless, ordinary grace, Thin wires trailing from both ears<br />
to some propulsive pop tune in her pocket<br />
and then is gone.</p>
<p>Across the street, a dreadlocked black man in a big straw hat<br />
is arguing about something with a little white lady<br />
whose gray head would scarcely reach his chest<br />
if they were close enough,<br />
but they’re facing each other<br />
from behind nose-to-nose shopping carts,<br />
his covered with cardboard, hers draped in green plastic garbage bags<br />
and then the bus, arriving, blocks them from his view.</p>
<p>The sister thumbs a button, collapsing her umbrella onto its stem<br />
like a wilted sunflower.<br />
He waves the women ahead, hangs back,<br />
looks at  the poster on the side of the bus<br />
and there’s the Mayor, in shirtsleeves, cuffs rolled back and necktie pulled loose, brandishing the levered nozzle of a green garden hose<br />
that’s still dripping, as if he’s just now stopped the flow.</p>
<p>Let’s Save Water! it says in big letters<br />
above the Mayor’s head </p>
<p>The women are aboard now, starting down the aisle. He ascends<br />
into air conditioning,<br />
digging into his pocket for the fare.</p>
<p>II.</p>
<p>It’s hot. Very hot. Vehicular Fragments–dark and light sheet metal, glimmers of chrome, glints of sun struck glass– ratchet across his patchwork view like film frames sputtering through the sprockets of a poorly-threaded projector. Now and again some kind of music blares,<br />
then dies out.</p>
<p>There are two other people there with him. Short adult shadows, female.<br />
Above one of their heads, something yellow hovers.<br />
An umbrella? , he holds out an upturned palm,just to be sure. No, of course<br />
It&#8217;s not raining. </p>
<p>Suddenly, there’s a din, the clatter of small hard wheels<br />
and sidewalk cracks. A youthful figure shoots by,<br />
Bare skin, muscle, flashes of red white and blue,<br />
gone.</p>
<p>The bus, an enormous shadow bodying forth out of nowhere, pullls up.<br />
He hears a click, and what he’s sure now is an umbrella<br />
comes down, disappears.</p>
<p>&#8220;<i>Pasele</i>,” says one of the women, with a flicker of deferential arm motion. “You go ahead.”</p>
<p>“thanks,” he says. “Gracias.” He makes out the doorway<br />
and ascends into air conditioning,<br />
digging into his pocket for the fare.</p>
<p>III.</p>
<p>It’s hot. Very hot. He hears a stop and go stream of traffic sounds and an occasional burst of music. </p>
<p>Then suddenly, there’s a din, the clatter<br />
of a  skateboard, if he guesses right,<br />
Coming, going, gone,<br />
its sound sponged up in the general din.</p>
<p>The bus arrives, a bulky presence blocking the weak breeze.<br />
there&#8217;s a mechanical click very close beside him.</p>
<p>&#8220;<i>Pasele</i>.” You go ahead,” says someone. Female, Latina by the accent, much shorter than him, judging by where the voice is coming from. </p>
<p>“Thanks,” he says, moving forward, sweeping his white cane in short purposeful arcs until its tip touches the curb. &#8220;Step up,&#8221; calls the driver, and he ascends<br />
into air conditioning,<br />
digging into his pocket for the fare.</p>
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