BY MIKE SCHNEIDER
for Melvin “Snip” Snyder
A gunslinger, if topped
by a rolled-brim white Stetson,
stands for justice — the code
was that simple. We were
the good guys. We won
the war. I was older brother, three
of us making trouble for Dad
& Mom, whose life was us. He’d
fought & killed for that. Driving
a Sherman over the Rhine at Bad
Godesburg, he eyed the high slopes
of evergreen darkness & many-spired
castles & veered south to waltz —
not quite — across the Blue
Danube & clank toward Munich,
deep into the land of wiener
schnitzel & striped pajamas. 1945,
he turned 18 that October. I grew up
incomprehending how all-the-way
violence engendered me. My first
therapist wanted me to see my Daddy
as a demon because he’d called me
dummkopf— dumbhead in Pennsylvania
Deutsch, old high-German dialect
that came down to us from King George’s
Hessians. Almost everyone I knew
as a kid originated in a land
where people Sprechen sie. All this
has more to do with who I am
than I can ever know.
Mike Schneider has published poems in many journals, including New Ohio Review, Notre Dame Review, and Poetry. Three times nominated for the Pushcart Prize, he received the 2012 Editors Award in Poetry from The Florida Review, and in 2016 the Robert Phillips Prize from Texas Review Press.