Poet, writer and teacher of history now retired geography, Guy Fequant, born in 1949 in Champagne-Ardennes, unfolds his walker compass on terrestrial ball, looking vibrant and populated place, formulating its views and moods in a fluid style , airy and fed to ancient texts and cosmic the example of those of Saint-John Perse which he devoted an essay. Penultimate sentence of the poet's acceptance speech Nobel laureate in 1960 is highlighted and gives the title of louvrage. "The lamp of clay" published in 1992 together with 73 pages often moving poetic prose and free verse taken from Guy Walker Fequant book. Ornithological knowledge of the author sy unfold majestically. Three short chapters make up the collection: "cardinal Regions"; "Sayings of off-season"; "High nuptials." The first four pages of text opening the collection entitled "Walking in laurore World" introduces a thought in motion, punctuated by walking and fruitful by the writing transcends the meetings. The key ideas in sénoncent detour dune phrase "modern Laliénation is devastating because she sacharne against the Sacred and against the great outdoors where the man was receiving revelation. This is a decline dordre metaphysical freedom ceased BE a star. " The next page, you can still read a basic principle become inaccessible "[] simply claim as a framework and support intellectual freedom, a sensitive freedom requires some peace, some empty, some distant harmony that would lon reach before dark. " In this inaugural text, twilight and often poignant, scraps of sentences radiate "[] ocean of grass that the memory suroît and hollow." The phrase, simple and balanced is made of specific words that render closer the vision of the heavenly pedestrian. The final text entitled "The lamp of clay" returns to the object symbol "both light and terracotta, life and death." The other texts, aphorisms and prose densified collected poems, all have iridescent gems to hold in the palm of the hand as Viaticum for the trip, each player drawing to his provender.