Inklings is divided into three sections. Part One: What Was is centred around the poet?s memories of
Point Edward, Ontario. His opening poem, First Impression, presents a succession of images of rive
Inklings is divided into three sections. Part One: What Was is centred around the poet?s memories of
Point Edward, Ontario. His opening poem, First Impression, presents a succession of images of river,
lake, lilacs and maples that transports the reader to that seminal moment in time where the poet?s initial
impression of the world was formed. The poems celebrating his early life in that small town are filled
with images of boys and girls growing up together, chasing each other and the sun as they pass
milestones and approach young adulthood, shimmering in the sunlight. Part Two: What Now contains a
celebration of family and friends, some departed, as in Nine Years: For Potsy: In Memoriam where
Gutteridge recounts the ?amber/afternoons we spent/on fairways and greens...summers at Cameron
Lake? spent with a deceased friend. In Allure: Guelph 1960: For Anne, the contrasting visual images of
the open-roofed VW, Anne?s lemon yellow dress glowing in the sun, red hair floating in the breeze and
sky blue eyes as she rolls up to where he?s waiting paints the scene vividly and indelibly in the reader?s
mind. In Puck: For Jeff, the poet paints the picture of a beloved son-in-law, a prankster with impish
grin, a jack-in-the-pulpit, characterized by images of Shakespeare?s Puck and the sound of Falstaff?s
hearty laughter which mingle in a man who ?swallow(s) the world in one/gulp.? Part Three is entitled
Whatever, but hidden in that non-committal word is the title poem and an intensive look at the poetic
spark underlying Gutteridge?s work. His title work describes the genesis of a poem as ?a tingle/in the
brain, a sprout abruptly/unbudded, the beginning/of a word or more precisely/its first singing
syllable,/enticed towards a phrase,/and then by some urge/to say the unsayable,/the nub of a poem
just/begun, and compelled/with a single-minded surge/to completion.? The reader finds himself
blissfully swept up in the poet?s tales of youthful adventures and his memories of Point Edward. The
poetry sings. The implicit rhythm of his words, the images, colors, depictions of motion, sound-sense
pairings, all working together smoothly and fluidly, seemingly defying the poet?s declaration of
inklings that spring of themselves, that urge themselves out onto the page, words that ?purr or rage?
written of themselves. Such seeming contradiction is just a part of the magic to be found within.
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