'quand tu savais vivre de peu ta vie t'accompagnait comme un essaim d'abeilles et tu payais sans marchander le prix exorbitant de la beauté'
Dans un entretien, Nocolas Bouvier disat: "La poésie m'est plus nécessaire que la prose parce qu'elle est extrêmement directe, brutal - c'est du full-contact!". Pourtant il ne fit paraître qu'un unique livre de poésie. Ecrits entre 1953 et 1997, ces poèmes forment un univers extraordinaire, celui de ce voyageur infatiguable, arpenteur des beautés façonnées par la nagure au gré des érosions et des accidents. Rapportée du monde entier, la poésie de Nicolas Bouvier dit dans un elangue précise et racée toute l'intensité du monde.
Nicolas Bouvier (1929-1998) was a Swiss writer and photographer.
His travels all over the world incited him to recount his experiences and adventures. His work is marked by a commitment to report what he sees and feels, shorn of any pretence of omniscience, leading often to an intimacy bordering on the mystical. His journey from Geneva to Japan was in many ways prescient of the great eastward wave of hippies that occurred in the sixties and seventies - slow, meandering progress in a small, iconic car, carefully guarded idiosyncrasy, a rite of passage. Yet, it differs in that the travelogues this journey inspired contain deep reflections on man's intimate nature, written in a style very much aware and appreciative of the traditions and possibilities of the language he uses. (He wrote mainly in French, though he does mention writing a series of travel articles in English for a local journal during his stay in Ceylon.)
His most famous books are The Way of the World, The Japanese Chronicles, and The Scorpion Fish.