And did not let them sense
 
 My buried Troy;
 
 For if they had, what scorns,
 
 Derision, jokes;
 
 I sealed my City deep
 
 From all those folks;
 
 And, growing, dug each day. What did I find
 
 And given as gift by Homer old and Homer blind?
 
 One Troy? No, ten!
 
 Ten Troys? No, two times ten! Three dozen!
 
 And each a richer, finer, brighter cousin!
 
 All in my flesh and blood,
 
 And each one true.
 
 So what's this mean?
 
 Go dig the Troy in you
 
 Go NOT WITH RUINS IN YOUR MIND
 
 Go not with ruins in your mind
 
 Or beauty fails; Rome's sun is blind
 
 And catacomb your cold hotel!
 
 Where should-be heavens could-be hell.
 
 Beware the temblors and the flood
 
 That time hides fast in tourist's blood
 
 And shambles forth from hidden home
 
 At sight of lost-in-ruins Rome.
 
 Think on your joyless blood, take care,
 
 Rome's scattered bricks and bones lie there
 
 In every chromosome and gene
 
 Lie all that was, or might have been.
 
 All architectural tombs and thrones
 
 Are tossed to ruin in your bones.