Yves Bonnefoy (1923-2016), a major poet, was equally a seminal essayist
and thinker. This companion volume to Yves Bonnefoy: Poems contains what
he regarded as his foundational essays, as well as a generous selection
from all periods. In his art criticism, as in his literary essays,
Bonnefoy manages that rare thing: to impart metaphysical urgency to each
discreet encounter with a painting or a poem, born of his constant quest
for intensity, for 'presence'. Whether he is examining an early
Byzantine fresco, a Shakespeare play, a Bernini angel, a drawing by
Blake, a poem by Rimbaud, the exigency, the high seriousness and the
challenge is the same: to affirm presence, and finitude, against all
forms of life-sapping conceptual thought. If they cannot always deliver
ecstasy or hope, the great poets, argues Bonnefoy, are pledged to
'intensity as such', sustained by 'une mélancolie ardente'.