We raise our own, our king’s, our Khufu’s walls
And hide behind with yams against our yielding
Because we have been paid or whipped to build
Against unbuilding.
But no old colonial pillbox with its beams
Fitted and spiked to rib
Many a cluster of lungs and hearts from cold;
No buttressed granite keep, or church, or shed
Pillared against the slug, or mouse, or mold;
Not even the snuggest web
Woven of words and prayers for iron tomes
Will serve to hold off Ugly, The Plugger, the dread
Borer in the bastions of our ruin.