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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


SCAFFOLDING by ALEXANDER LOUIS FRASER

First Line: THAT SCAFFOLDING A VANTAGE GROUND DOTH MAKE
Last Line: WHICH, STRIPPED OF MUNDANE HELPS, STANDS FORTH AT LAST.

That scaffolding a vantage ground doth make
Whereon the workman and his work may meet;
But when the building stands at last complete—
With copestone placed—the builder then will take
The staging down; it stands for the sole sake
Of being auxiliary, and so when all
Its purpose has been served, why, let it fall;
The work is done which he did undertake.

Likewise, when human life with care we scan,
What helps we see: Time, station, money, books;
These, one and all, a purpose serve for man,
They form a vantage ground from which he looks
At life, and compasses its building vast—
Which, stripped of mundane helps, stands forth at last.



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