damn sure that in 1998, during Hurricane Georges, I saw the river, at least the topmost layer of it, flowing backward (because the wind was blowing so hard southerly along that northerly hitch), you can see why I might not be absolutely sure.
It was late and I was by myself at the time, nobody else was around. And I was feeling let down, because although the wind was blowing hard, and half the population had been evacuated, and thousands whoâd stayed had been herded into the Superdome for their safety, and my friend Greg Jaynes and I had taken refuge in the shuttered-up Burgundy Street home of my friend Curtis Wilkie, it was clear that this was not going to be the Big One: the full force of Georges was going to miss us.
We knew this from Nash Roberts. Nash Roberts is a veteran New Orleans TV weatherman who is low-tech, at least by way of presentation, and always right. Nash was broadcasting from his own house, it looked like, tracing the hurricane with a grease pencil on a sheet of Plexiglas or a pad of paper, I forget which, while the other channelsâ meteorologists were using all manner of laser pointers and rear-projected electronic schematic representations of the area. You couldnât tell what in the world Nash was scribbling with the grease pencil, but as usual he was the first to make the call, this oneâs going to miss us, and he was on the money.
So I felt I could venture outside and take a look at the river, and when I did, it was going backward. Iâm pretty damn sure.
Ordinarily, at any rate, when you face the river from the French Quarter youâll see the river flowing from your right to your left. As recently as the late sixties, early seventies, when Kermit Ruffins was a kid in New Orleansâheâs a fixture in the city now as a jazz musicianâheâd catch crabs from the river, to eat. âGet some string, tie a chicken leg on it, and when that string get real tight, pull in real slowâscoop âem up and put âem in the bucket. End of the day we might have a hundred, hundred-fifty crabs.â You wouldnât want to eat anything out of the river here now; itâs filthy with silt and petrochemicals. But itâs a robust presence. John Barry, author of
Rising Tide,
a terrific book about the horrific flood of 1927 (which the New Orleans elite managed to divert onto poorer folksâ lands) says the river is âperfect,â as opposed to the imperfect people who try to make it behave. Itâs a little like the horse that the New Orleans âswamp bluesâ musician Coco Robichaux told me about, which kept walking into a post, over and over. âWhat are you doing trying to sell a blind horse?â somebody said. âHe ainât blind,â said the man who was trying to sell him. âHeâs just tough. He donât care.â
The river is perfect because it doesnât care. It would just as soon drown New Orleans, or any other place, as not. But people, being imperfect, want to believe that it cares. People call it âOld Man River,â âThe Father of Waters.â Big dirty thruster barreling into town.
And New Orleans, née
La Nouvelle Orleans,
is ready to take him on. Not âreadyâ in the sense that she has pulled herself together for their ultimate date yet (efforts are under way to figure out how to build a wall or something), but she wouldnât be herself if she were all squared away. Stephanie Dupuy, a native New Orleanian, once quoted Billy Wilder on Marilyn Monroe to relevant effect here. Stephanie and I were in Jennifer Flowersâs club listening to her sing âHappy Birthdayâ in a breathy voice, and let it be said that she, who had a long affair with Bill Clinton, did not belabor the allusion by singing it explicitly to âMr. President.â Stephanie works out of the mayorâs office, coordinating with people making movies in the city. She says that when movie people come