The Conifers

(a villanelle)

The conifers spoke to the deciduous trees
Deep in the cool, ancient wood.
“Wish,” they whispered, “they were a gentler species.”

Honey locusts and maples nodded their leaves,
Mulberries and oaks, as well, understood.
The conifers spoke to the deciduous trees:

“Shall nature stand by as they do as they please?”
“We know,” wept the Willow sisters, both so good,
“We wish,” they whimpered, “they were a gentler species.”

“They make our home an abattoir of sleaze,
“stripping from lasses, at best, their girlhood,”
Cried indignant yule firs to the deciduous trees.

A rare living elm, who withstood Dutch disease,
Called a forest meeting; all attended who could.
“No more passive wishing they were a gentler species.”

No surprise, then, when swarms of wasps and of bees
Attacked and killed each one of these hoods.
The conifers chuckled to the deciduous trees,
“Bet they wished,” they whispered, “they’d been a gentler species.”

By Rhonda Rosenheck

Rhonda Rosenheck’s poetry is inspired by ancient texts, nature, and human complexities. She won a NYSCA grant for Thriving: An Anthology (ed., 2024) and authored The Five Books of Limericks, Looking, and Yiddische Yoga: OYsanas for Every Generation (humor). Her poems have appeared in magazines, journals and anthologies; one was performed at Cooperstown, NY’s Glimmerglobe Theater. Rhonda was a featured poet in Judith Magazine. She has been featured at readings in MA and in Upstate NY. She participated in the Colrain Manuscript Conference and in juried residencies at the Fish Factory Arts Centre (Iceland) and Prospect Street Writers House (Vermont).

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