We know what it means to miss New Orleans...
Love for New Orleans Remains Vivid
Love for a City Submerged in Water Remains Vivid in the Mind
By CHARLOTTE PORTER
The Associated Press
Aug. 31, 2005 - There's a whole new meaning today to that old Louis Armstrong favorite, "Do you know what it means to miss New Orleans?"
We know all too well.
As we write this, we don't know if our homes are standing, what has happened to many of our friends or what is left of our city. Should we write its obituary, or just a love letter to a city that despite poverty and decay, despite corruption and decadence, was always so vital and carefree?
They didn't call it "the City that Care Forgot" for nothing.
We have loved it for its insouciance, for the giant live oaks lining majestic St. Charles Avenue, for the funky shops along Magazine Street, for the music and scents that drifted from every bar and restaurant in the French Quarter, for the ferns that sprouted from the sides of neglected old buildings.
We have loved it for Mardi Gras, both the raucous revelry of the French Quarter and the more sedate but still crazy parades that wound along St. Charles, past City Hall, onto Canal Street.
We have loved it for JazzFest, for the tens of thousands drawn to the Fairgrounds each spring for jazz, zydeco, African and Cajun tunes, bowls of saucy crawfish Monica and ice cold beer.
We have loved it for the alligators and barred owls that prowl swamplands, some of them within the city limits.
We have loved it for its coffee, so rich and dark that anything else seems like tinted water. For cafe au lait, tan and sweet, and beignets that get powdered sugar all over you as you watch the tourists wander past.
We have loved it for its language, strange and different, sort of Brooklyn with a drawl. Waiters ask if we want "ersters" raw, of course. People don't shop for food, they "make groceries." We walk on banquettes, not sidewalks, and drive down broad streets divided by "neutral ground," not medians. The store clerks call you "hon" and "dawlin'" and tell you, "I saw you on the television right up next to the pope!"
We have loved it for the Saints, even though they never win and even though we covered our faces with brown paper bags when being a fan was too embarrassing.
We have loved it for the police who took pictures of women flashing their breasts on Bourbon Street, or dressed in drag to prowl for Halloween drug sales in the Quarter, hauling up their skirts to pull handcuffs out of their pants pockets.
We have loved it for the drunks, the nut cases, the punks, the vampire wannabes drawn by the Gothic romance of Anne Rice.
We've even loved it for the warning we gave visitors: If someone bets he knows where you got them shoes, don't take the bet; they're on your feet.
We used to give that warning. We may not need to for a while.
EDITOR'S NOTE Charlotte Porter is the AP bureau chief in New Orleans. She wrote this story with the help of her staff.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures
2 Comments:
We love it for the street signs on the ground, the ledge on the street cars which are wide enough to lean a notebook on.
We love The Early Bird Cafe, the ceasar dressing at Louisiana Pizza kitchen, the long gone memory of Martin's Wine cellar, and the Brown Derby which was the only place open to get eggs on New Years Day.
We love the sound of the rain on the tin roofs and the horn from the river you had to walk up to see. We love the Whole Foods over by the Fairgrounds and the Fisherman's Friend where we learned to buy shrimps. We love the Rue de la Course and the food stamp A and P on Magazine St.
Most of all ... we love the people.
wht's left to be said after seeing all the images and hearing the first
hand
accounts of being in and around the 'big easy' these last coupla days?
possibly, nothing new or newsworthy.
still, my heart aches for my dear, old friend, the 'city tht care
forgot'.
i smell beignets and french market coffee, i hear the trumpet playing
'wht a
wonderful world' on royal street , i taste jam-jama, and i feel like
the good
times won't be rolling any time soon.
there was a house in new orleans, they called it the rising sun....
take groovie care,
barney evergreen
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