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FWP:
SETS == GESTURES
MOTIFS == [LOVER AS BIRD]
NAMES
TERMS == TUMULT-AROUSINGNow that I've become alert to 'gestures', I see them in abundance, and here's another. The caged bird sees a rose-leaf from the garden flutter by-- it is either paying a visit to the cage, or merely drifting past at random. In either case, the gesture is indecipherable, because it's unresolvably ambiguous. It could mean, as SRF notes, that the rose-leaf either cares for, or wishes to torment, the caged bird; but the rose-leaf might also be a haphazard wanderer, quite indifferent to him. The presence of the rose-leaf could mean that the garden is flourishing, or that it has been destroyed; or it could provide no information at all about the garden.
In any case the speaker, the caged bird, distances himself from the whole thing as much as possible. He disclaims all knowledge of the garden; he says that the rose-leaf, blown by the breeze, comes 'sometimes'. And most conspicuously, he denies all intimacy by referring to it as 'some rose-leaf'. Of course, as SRF notes, such self-distancing need not be proof of indifference; it can convey sorrow or sarcasm, or a determination to refuse (any further) involvement. The gesture of the drifting leaf passing by the cage is beyond the bird's power to interpret, and beyond our power to put into words. What better device can there be, for a poem fifteen or twenty words long?