Tag: The cobra takes position

  • Tread Lightly

    Tread Lightly

    The cobra takes position
    Defensive in its stance
    Considers its condition
    With survival in its glance.
    The guard upon his sentry
    In demeanor is alike
    He monitors the entry
    And readies for a strike
    Take notice of his figure
    Tread lightly on his patch
    Do nothing that might trigger
    The ignition of his match
    . Beware the enemy in wait, the spontaneous debate,
    . Take care the masking of a trait … too late, too late.

    © Tim Grace, 13 August 2010


     

    To the reader: Around the world our dignitaries are guarded by ceremonial sentries. The guards are garbed in symbolism and perversely create a deliberate and distracting point of interest. The aloof but alert nature of a guard is what creates public curiosity and draws our attention away from the protected investment. Every gesture of guardianship is nuanced with reference to a larger more potent force lying in wait … ready and prepared to strike if called upon to do so.

    To the poet: Short lines and simple statements in three sets of four. The first four describe a cobra coiled with the tension of a tightly wound spring. The middle four describe the counterpart; the guard in wait, the sentry at attention, the guard on guard. The final four holds together the allegory with ambiguous use of ‘his’ as either cobra or guard. The lines in the last couplet are long and stretch the use of rhyme a little too far.


     

     

    tread lightly tread lightly