a congealed filigree a monochrome mandala all sage and silken crumbles shivering on the roadside a confused candlewick a snail trail sonogram, its embroidered ecru edges ebbing in the breeze swaying shreds sashaying all the birds above tumbling in the trees black towels in a dryer and the traffic rushing past, bees flying drunk, droning, […]
Virginia Boudreau
Virginia Boudreau is a retired teacher living on the south shore of Nova Scotia. Her poetry and prose have appeared in a wide variety of international literary magazines and anthologies. Most recently, Flagler Review, Querty, Second Storey, Metafore, Palette Poetry, and TNQ. New writing will be upcoming in Grain, and The New York Times (Solver’s Column). She is in the process of completing her first poetry manuscript, twenty years later than intended.