In 1962 my father toiled in Quincy,
two weeks, no more,
and saw no blacks except for
two young ladies
who moved like swans
busing dishes
in a farmer’s cafeteria.
Daisy badges on their uniforms
announced their names,
their years of service.
He still remembers how
throughout his meal
he wanted to stand,
a stranger in a
seersucker suit,
and shout:
“How can you live here?
Where, except in church,
can you clap your hands
in emancipation?”
Donal Mahoney