I can still remember that day in San Francisco, on Columbus just down from City Lights Books, a young man sitting on a milk crate another in front of him on which he perched an old typewriter. “A dollar buys you a poem” he said with a mix of hope and resignation, his fingers poised over the worn keys, their letters fading as was his ribbon. I produced a bill and he set to typing, although I do not recall his words, when he was done I handed him a five. He seemed in shock, so I said “I am a fellow poet, but my Royal Standard died years ago.” He was about to reply when he saw another potential customer and I moved on down the block.
Louis Faber is a poet and blogger. His work has appeared in Cantos, The Poet (U.K.), Alchemy Spoon, New Feathers Anthology, Dreich (Scotland), Tomorrow and Tomorrow, Defenestration, Atlanta Review, Glimpse, Rattle, Pearl, The South Carolina Review and Worcester Review, among many others, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.