Piker Press — Weekly Journal of Arts and Literature
April 27, 2026

In NOLA

"...I come from big-band jazz..."

In NOLA

I ripped apart Mr. Lincoln’s soul,
And let Satchmo’s left-behind notes
Drift in the atmosphere;
The music tastes even sweeter
When mixed with the aroma of jambalaya soufflés
And blackened catfish smoke.

I come from big-band jazz.
I come from sent-south Negroes, and Old Death,
For who knows the number of innocents
Forgotten under the Antebellum homes of the French Quarter.

I am home.
I sip from the thousand-tale Delta
And bear my flood water and Cajun parades proudly;
Home here is melting-pot gumbo and tossing around a weekend football.







Article © Matthew Johnson. All rights reserved.
Published in the May 27, 2024 issue .
Image(s) are public domain.
More by Matthew Johnson → More poetry → Full issue →
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2 Reader Comments
Barbara Ann Meier
05/29/2024
09:05:07 AM
I can hear it.
I can taste it.
I can smell it.
"For who knows the number of innocents
Forgotten under the Antebellum homes of the French Quarter."
This line hurts.
Barbara Meier
05/29/2024
09:05:07 AM
And now I know what "In Nola" means.
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