When rain comes on, I get up and look out.
It is a spectacle, a miracle,
a blessing not in wise disguise at all.
I hear it first, soft patter as drops hit
the leaves of tall green trees, metal of cars,
touch every inch of pavement, tarmac, grass.
It starts to fall, keeps at it, comes to pass
in tiny particles of water. Stars
are not so close and local. Watch a patch
get wetter by the minute. Rain is certain
to draw its grey dense sheet across – curtain
of gloom, well known, a gentle pall. I catch
one raindrop, bring my arm back in, housebound
as drains sound musical, full of that stuff,
near vertical, sent down. It eases off.
I go back to my book, the whole day crowned
by ordinary rain, fleeting, complete.
Its course is not competing, falls and flows
till ground is drowned, as only nature knows.
It comes and goes. It makes me leave my seat
like gospel convert, caught up in the word
or football fan when well aimed ball goes in
or dancer with the answer set to spin
quick feet. I want to see what I have heard
to witness wetness, sustained pattern, slant,
velocity and saturation, get
the quality of it, as a poet
which goes deep, to the roots of tree and plant,
or sonic power to enchant. How rain
is not a sprawling symphony of noise,
maintains its austere form, its harpist's poise,
its stanzas regular. Rain keeps it plain.
I want to get up from my seat again.