An afternoon of rain

over clusters of trees

with leaves and flowers

peeling off from the boughs

to the grassy ground:

how it wafts a smell not earthy

but sweet, even sacred –

the incense of benediction

the candle flames at both sides of the altar,

the garden of roses on the marbled floor,

even the breath of the priest

prompting Tantum Ergo;

how too the unending pitter-patter

drowns out screeching, honking engines

hushing the grind of life

like a litany of prayers

learned as a child.

 

Is it the mind just meandering lonely

to a long ago

or is it the soul being awakened

to an overdue bath

after many summers

of weeds and wastes?

A whole afternoon of rain

no regrets over schedules missed

and hours sitting it out.

I will come off it

a fresh morning dew

from the smiling sky.

 

 


Footnote: Tantum Ergo, from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:

The Latin text of “Tantum Ergo” sung to its traditional melody, which is a mode I Gregorian chant.
“Tantum ergo” is the incipit of the last two verses of Pange lingua, a Medieval Latin hymn generally attributed to St Thomas Aquinas c. 1264, but based by Aquinas upon various earlier fragments. The “Genitori genitoque” and “Procedenti ab utroque” portions are adapted from Adam of Saint Victor’s sequence for Pentecost. The hymn’s Latin incipit literally translates to “Therefore so great”.

The singing of the Tantum ergo occurs during veneration and benediction of the Blessed Sacrament in the Catholic Church and other denominations that have this devotion. It is usually sung, though solemn recitation is sometimes done, and permitted.