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Poem-a-day

Burning Candle

In any case, by the time I realized I hadn’t spoken to my father 
           for many, many years, I was distracted. It was snowing

and I was stuck on page 157 of a biography of Casanova 
           who may have slept with multitudes, but lost 

a fortune investing in a silk factory. I dreamed 
           about that story. I maintained my silence

in my cold room there, in Iowa, where industries 
           disappear the fingers and feet of its workers, a cohort

among which my dad might have been counted 
           had his travels led him farther north. Is there hazard pay

in the feeding of America? I have traveled so far from God,  
           my dad might have quoted if he kept diaries.

But who was I kidding? It was not the season of fathers.  
           It was the season of asylum. My uncle told me so. 

While I sat there, in the gauzy twilight of snowy Iowa,  
           he traveled to the edge of Arizona

where he walked himself, hands in pockets, to border patrol. 
           When I was a child, he was also a child. 

He held me down, poured wax on my neck  
           from hot devotional candles. I read in my room 

when Juan Diego bailed on his meeting with the ghost 
           of Mary, she chided him for worrying

about his terminal uncle. Am I not here, she asked, 
           I, who is your sanctuary? I dreamed about that story 

when the snow first began falling in Iowa. I was warmed  
           by the wax that tore like an arrow through my skin.

Copyright © 2025 by Austin Araujo. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on January 1, 2026 by the Academy of American Poets. 

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Austin Araujo

Austin Araujo
Photo credit: Kendra Wilson
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About Poem-a-Day

Poem-a-Day is the original and only daily digital poetry series featuring over 250 new, previously unpublished poems by today’s talented poets each year. Khaled Mattawa is the Guest Editor of December. Read or listen to a Q&A with Mattawa about his curatorial process, and learn more about the 2025 Guest Editors. Support Poem-a-Day.  

If you have any questions about Poem-a-Day, visit our Poem-a-Day FAQ.

Previous Poems

Title Author Date
The Glory of the Day Was in Her Face James Weldon Johnson 04/01/2017
They Ate the Bulbs of Tulips Mark Wagenaar 03/31/2017
Syllabus for the Dark Ahead Jehanne Dubrow 03/30/2017
Abandoned Block Factory, Arkansas Elizabeth Lindsey Rogers 03/29/2017
Maps Yesenia Montilla 03/28/2017
Darwinist Logic on Unrequited Love Katie Willingham 03/27/2017
Dead Leaves Georgia Douglas Johnson 03/26/2017
Going Back D. H. Lawrence 03/25/2017
Self-Portrait as Exit Wounds Ocean Vuong 03/24/2017
Deception Story Solmaz Sharif 03/23/2017

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