I wandered late, but I was not alone: The Night walked with me Like a black hound With eyes of rainwater-starlight, And breath in misty plumes.
The church loomed, hulking, in the dark, For in my fragility I sought some solace there- To be alone in a place where faith rang like music, Perhaps the echoes of believers would seep into me And slow my pulse And lend me a scrap of comfort that I didn't own... There is something sacred about a silent place In which hundreds of people have sat and allowed themselves To feel, And I believe in that, if not in God.
Halfway to tears, I tried the door But it was locked. And the belated certainty that it always had been Settled over me like a lead blanket, And I sat, shivering, on the steps. And my companion- Now a hot, solid form of shifting bones and sinew- Whined his sympathies, Curled around me And laid his massive head Upon my knee.
(Yes, the black dog is a folklore reference to Hellhounds.)