Upvote:1
"Evening prayer" in the Divine Office* is called vespers.
According to The Divine Office: A Study of the Roman Breviary by Rev. E.J. Quigley,
Vespers, in structure, resembles Lauds and consists of five Psalms.
You can explore the so-called Kalendarium of the Divine Office here. That website also lets you compare these editions of the Office:
It may be the "Liturgy of the Hours" you are using is a post-Vatican II edition. Vatican II had the effect of severely abbreviating the already somewhat abbreviated Breviary, so that may be why your vespers sometimes lacks psalms! For the differences between the traditional breviary and the Novus Ordo (i.e., Vatican II) "Liturgy of the Hours," see:
Both these articles mention that "With the reforms of the Second Vatican Council the traditional one-week Psalter cycle became a four-week cycle."
*also called, variously: Divinum Officium, Office, Breviary, or "Liturgy of the Hours"
Upvote:3
The psalm prayer consists of optional prayers that may be said after each psalm. The General Instruction of the Liturgy of the Hours describes them as follows:
112. Psalm-prayers for each psalm are given in the supplement to the Liturgy of the Hours, to help in understanding them in a predominantly Christian way. They may be used in the ancient traditional way: after the psalm a period of silence is observed, then the prayer gathers up and rounds off the thoughts and inspirations of those taking part (Source: http://dariasockey.blogspot.it/2013/04/divine-office-factoid-5-perenniel-psalm.html).
They appear in the Office of Readings, Morning Prayer (Lauds), the Daytime Prayers (Terce, Sext, and None), and Evening Prayer (Vespers). They do not appear at Night Prayer (Compline).
There are a number of reasons why a psalm prayer might not appear after the recitation of a given canticle. First of all, a psalm prayer appears only after a true psalm, one of the 150 chapters of the Book of Psalms (as numbered in the Vulgate, not in the Hebrew Old Testament). Hence, they never appear after the second canticle of Lauds (which is always taken from an Old-Testament source other than the Psalms) or the third canticle of Vespers (which is always taken from the New Testament).
Second, especially in the Office of Readings and the Daytime Prayers, sometimes a psalm runs continuously, constituting two or three of the canticles. (Also Psalm 118, or 119 in the Hebrew, is so long that it is spaced out during several weeks.) In those cases, the psalm prayer is found only at the end of the complete psalm.
Since the psalm prayer is optional and not usually used in public recitation, many editions omit it altogether.
(However, the online edition on iBreviery in English, which uses the American text, does have them.)