Capturing the Scent of Rain

Explore:

A perfumery in India has bottled the fragrance

Our ancestors taught us to love
the scent because we need rain
to survive

to raise gardens—golden squash
lima beans, red tulips

to ripple lakes, cleanse us
             under blue-white waterfalls to lick wet lips,
to drink in, soothe us

sing to us: the trickling down
             windows, patter songs
on tin roofs, on fallen leaves.

Scientists cannot capture love
nor prove it           but have found
the scent of rain:

An oil they named petrichor
—from the Greek petra (stone)
and ichor (ethereal blood of gods)—
     released
when raindrops touch porous stone

birthing pinpoint bubbles
which fizz like champagne
             lift the essence
—blood of the stone—into the wind

to our senses.         The elixir deepens
when the land is dry and rain is light:
scent and sound intoxicate lovers.

And during drought
there’s still a dab behind the ear
or in the hollow
             above the wishbone.

Karen Paul Holmes won the Lascaux Review 2023 Poetry Prize and a poem was given Special Mention in the Pushcart Prizer Anthology, 2024. Her two books of poetry are No Such Thing As Distance (Terrapin Books, 2018) and Untying the Knot (Aldrich Press, 2014). Publications include Plume Poetry, Prairie Schooner, Poetry East, Pedestal, Diode, and Poet Lore. To support fellow writers, Karen started and hosts a critique group in Atlanta. She also hosted Writers’ Night Out in the Blue Ridge Mountains for 12 years. She is also a roving writing workshop teacher.