=== |
FWP:
SETS == KYA
MOTIFS == WRITING
NAMES
TERMS == QUATRAINSRF envisions a situation in which the beloved's not writing is 'simple', while it is her writing a letter that causes people to make awkward social inquiries. But in the social setting that he envisions-- one in which everybody knows what letters everybody else gets-- it's easy to imagine that people might also inquire about the lack of letters: 'What do you hear from her?', or 'You haven't had a letter in ages, what's going on?'. Then the speaker's embarrassment would come from his desire not to admit that she had suddenly flared into anger and he was in disgrace. On this reading, to understand her failure to write is 'simple', but to answer questions about it is the problematical part.
The second line makes enjoyable use of the 'kya effect'. When people ask questions, the choices are remarkably diverse: 'Would one give a reply?' (a yes-or-no question); 'What reply might/would one give?' (a general question); 'What a reply one might/would give!' (an ominous exclamation); 'As if one would give a reply!' (an indignant repudiation of the idea). By no coincidence, each of these four possibilities resonates elegantly-- and of course differently-- with the idea that the beloved's failure to write is 'simple'.
And the speaker worries not about what reply he himself might give, but about what reply ko))ii , 'one' or 'someone', might or would give in that situation. Plainly he sees his predicament as a potentially universal one-- and one of utter haplessness and social humiliation.