Night, and I watched from the side
of the river the cars inching forward, a line of white
headlights like the white-tipped canes
the blind put out before each step, tapping down
onto the otherness, the world. The insides
of the cars were dark, the windows dark.
I couldn’t see how flesh is taken up
into the distances, enthralled by them, by the ahead;
only the lights lifting the silver of the cables,

the bridge’s skeletal wires,
then putting them back down. How the cars bunched
at the tollbooths, one clotted edgy slowness,
while in the car at the front of each line,
a hand (I couldn’t see it but of course it would be there)
rolled down the small window,
and reached out with its ticket and its bills;
the other hand opening
to receive them,

sorting out the coins for change –
the bright silver faces enshrined in each small sphere.
Quarters. Nickels. Dimes.
Then the hand rolling the window back up,
the faces floating behind it as if not attached,
as music from the tollbooth pulses over
the tolltaker’s fingers drumming on the register,
and then the barrier’s lifting,
letting them pass through….

Now they must be moving past the landfill,
past the gulls (are they asleep? where are their nests?)
that poke down into the stinking
garbage heaps by day,
and the flames from the refineries
burning at all hours
like the flame on the assassinated President’s grave.
Maybe a radio is on, yes, it must be on,
a talk show,

a voice saying Bomb them
to teach them a lesson,
and then the click as he hangs up, the hollowness
of air for just one second, a commercial for Pepsi,
a commercial for beef.
Rain, guard rails, rest stops, rain, more rain,
while headlights burn through the rearview mirror
as if pinned there, but by what?
A hand reaches for the dial

to keep the sound from fading,
the announcer’s words breaking up in the staticky thickness
until another voice comes on
and then it too strays off in jagged pieces,
slurred pauses, mangled sounds….
The dashboard glows in the darkness,
the green numbers of each gauge each clock face
glowing. The night is filled with them,
these dashboards,

and the eyes that turn toward the white-lined roadways
that yield so little,
not shapes but the memory of shapes,
as if the gods had taken back the world
and the terrible innocence of flesh
glides forward in the sealed and heated cars,
the music playing, marking time,
over the notion of home,
over the riven vanished earth.

Laurie Sheck, b. 1953 – “Headlights” from The Willow Grove



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2 responses

  1. Jennifer Mugrage Avatar
    Jennifer Mugrage

    Wow!

    Liked by 2 people

  2. I’ve no idea why Sheck isn’t better known as a poet. Find her book The Willow Grove, you won’t regret it

    Liked by 2 people

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#209 – Being a Jew in 1900, Being a Jew Now Human Voices Wake Us

An episode from 12/15/25: Tonight, I read from Irving Howe’s World of Our Fathers: The Journey of the East European Jews to America and the Life They Found and Made. In light of the events in Australia yesterday, I take the time not just to talk about what it meant to be a Jewish immigrant to America around the year 1900, but what it means to me to be a Jew right now.The best way to support the podcast is by leaving a review on Apple or Spotify, sharing it with others, or sending me a note on what you think. You can also order any of my books: Time and the River: From Columbine to the Invention of Fire, due out next year, is now available for preorder. Other books include Notes from the Grid, To the House of the Sun, The Lonely Young & the Lonely Old, and Bone Antler Stone. I've also edited a handful of books in the S4N Pocket Poems series.Email me at humanvoiceswakeus1@gmail.com.
  1. #209 – Being a Jew in 1900, Being a Jew Now
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  3. #207 – Death, the Gods, and Endless Life in Ancient Egypt
  4. #206 – The Discovery of Indo-European Languages – 1876
  5. #205: Learning to Read, c. 2000 BCE
  6. #204: Walt Whitman's "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry," 1856
  7. #203: Bruce Springsteen Talks About "Nebraska" – 1984
  8. #202 – A Death at Sea, 1834
  9. #201 – Gillian Anderson, & What Women Want, 2024
  10. #200: The Last Days of Walter Benjamin, 1940

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