[EN] In the imaginary world of Paul Claudel, water occupies a prominent place. In his poetry (Cinq grandes Odes and Connaissance de l’Est), the poet celebrates this element as no other poet does, fully associating it with the religious dimension of his work. In his plays, Claudel, while reasserting the religious function of water, also assigns to water an essential role in his effort to renew the drama. This is the case in L’Échange, which makes the beach into the play’s setting: the character Louis Laine, figure of the poet, dreams of « living in deep water » and of swimming « like a fish ». Le Soulier de satin amplifies even more the role of the sea: the work in its entirety is a sort of gigantic « bateau ivre » sailing on the « Poe...