This place is a museum now; this great hall where my father stood. Here he waited on line with all the rest. He waited for admission. He was dressed in his best with a few dollars in his pocket, and the address of his sister and her husband in New York.
There’s a lady in the harbor here who holds her torch aloft for all.
My mother, Helen, was native, first generation born upon these shores. My father was a laborer; the quarries and mines had made him strong. His years in Scotland plus his native Irish brogue was baffling at first to those Ellis Island clerks.
There’s a lady in the harbor here who holds her torch aloft for all.
My Dad found work building a bridge high above the waters reach. He started out a near illiterate but slowly learned to read From discarded copies of the New York Daily News. He met my mom at an Irish dance.
There’s a lady in the harbor here who holds her torch aloft for all.
My mother’s voice was all New York; a dialect of English speech. She loved her numbers, and clerked for Met Life, but she may have longed to teach. Instead she sat with me in our small kitchen Teaching me my numbers as our dinner was prepared.
There’s a lady in the harbor here who holds her torch aloft for all.
For those of you who have heard me speak And found my own accent hard to place. I am a little of old New York and a little of a fair green place. My American voice is but the echoed music of my race.