The Journey Not Taken: Why Albert Camus Never Travelled to India
Albert Camus died on 4 January 1960, aged 46, in a car crash on the road between Provence and Paris. With him died a series of plans that were only just becoming visible: to step back from journalism and politics, to write differently, and to travel far. Among the places he spoke of was India. He never went. He did not reject India. He simply ran out of time.
The reasons are straightforward, though often overlooked: he was overburdened, he was politically trapped, he was in poor health, and he died before the window opened. But the desire was there. It appears in letters, in conversations, and in the tone of his last notebooks. Had he lived, it is almost certain he would have gone.
A Life Without Margin: 1945–1960
To understand why Camus did not travel, one must first understand what filled his years.
Éditions Gallimard. From 1945 Camus worked as lecteur and later responsable de collection at Gallimard. This was not an honorary title. He read three to four manuscripts a week, wrote detailed reports, and managed authors. The post anchored him to Paris. A journey to India in the 1950s required a minimum of two to three months. The publishing house could not spare him for that long, and he could not absent himself without damaging the work he valued.
Algeria
Camus was born in Mondovi, Algeria, in 1913. The War of Independence, 1954–1962, consumed his public life. He was attacked from both sides: by the French right for his calls for a “civil truce”, and by the left for not condemning France outright. Between 1955 and 1958 he wrote appeals, articles, and gave press conferences. He felt personally responsible. To leave for India during this period would have been read as desertion. He wrote in 1957: “I have people on both sides whom I love.” That is not a position from which one departs for several months.
Theatre and journalism.
From 1944 to 1947 he edited Combat. From 1946 to 1953 he directed and adapted plays: Caligula, The Misunderstanding, The State of Siege. Even after leaving daily journalism, he wrote prefaces, gave lectures in Europe and the United States, and engaged in public debate. There was no sustained period of freedom. Travel to India was not a two-week holiday. It was an expedition. Camus did not have the months to give.
He Died Too Young
The most decisive reason is chronological. Camus died at 46. Compare this with his contemporaries. Romain Rolland travelled to India in his sixties. André Malraux made extensive trips in his fifties. Simone de Beauvoir and Sartre went in 1966 and 1967, also in their sixties.
Camus was only just entering the age when such travel becomes feasible. The Nobel Prize in Literature, awarded in December 1957, gave him financial security for the first time. His Carnets from 1958–1959 show a clear shift. He writes of “silence”, “retreat”, “another rhythm”. He bought a house in Lourmarin. He told friends he wanted to stop writing for the press and return to fiction and essays.
India appears in this late period as a real possibility, not a vague idea. But he had only thirteen months between Stockholm and the crash. That is not enough time to plan, fund, and undertake a major journey, particularly with his health.
The Evidence of Desire: Letters to René Char
The most direct evidence comes from his correspondence with the poet René Char* They met in 1946 and remained close until Camus’ death. Their letters record Camus’ inner life with unusual candour. In 1958 Camus wrote of needing “to go far from Europe, to places where the sun teaches a different patience”. Char later recalled that Camus spoke specifically of Asia. Not as a tourist, but as a thinker seeking a different quality of light and silence. Char wrote after 1960 that they had discussed travel once the Algerian situation was “settled”. He believed Camus meant India, Greece, and other places “where stone and sea teach the same lesson”.
This is important. Camus was not drawn to India as exoticism. He was drawn to it as a civilisation that had, for millennia, reflected on suffering, on limits, and on how to live without illusion. These were precisely the questions at the centre of _The Myth of Sisyphus and The Rebel.
Health and Practical Obstacles
Camus contracted tuberculosis in 1930, aged 17. It recurred throughout his life. By the 1950s it was managed, but long-haul travel remained a risk.
A flight to India in 1959 took 20–24 hours with several stops. A sea voyage took three to four weeks each way. For someone with fragile lungs, this was not trivial.
There were also institutional barriers. India in the 1950s was newly independent and intellectually vibrant, but Camus had no university post, no lecture tour, no publisher’s commission to go. He would have had to travel as a private individual, and that required the very thing he lacked: uninterrupted time.
He Travelled Through Reading
Because he could not go physically, Camus went textually. He read widely in Eastern philosophy and history. In his notebooks from the early 1950s he notes passages on non-violence, on detachment, and on the ethics of action without hope of victory. These themes echo throughout ;The Rebel, and The Plague.
For Camus, reading was a legitimate form of travel. In Carnets_he writes: “To read is to go elsewhere without leaving.” India was present in his work as an intellectual horizon. The physical journey would have been the next step.
The Intellectual Climate of the Late 1950s
The late 1950s was a turning point for French thought. After Stalinism and during the Algerian War, Europe no longer appeared as the sole source of answers. Many writers and philosophers began to look eastward.
Camus’ turn was not towards mysticism. He was looking for an ethics that did not depend on God or on History. He was looking for a way to affirm limits, to act without illusion, and to maintain solidarity in a world without guarantees.
India, in the public imagination of the time, represented precisely that: a long tradition of reflection on suffering and on how to act decently within it. It is not surprising that Camus, in his late notes, should have turned his attention there.
Had he gone in 1961, he would likely not have gone to ashrams. He would have gone to universities, to libraries, to speak with scholars. He had gone to Greece in 1955 for the same reason: to stand in the landscape that had produced a certain kind of thought.
He Would Have Gone Had He Lived
This is not speculation for its own sake. It is what those close to him stated. Francine Camus, his wife, said after 1960 that he was planning “a long trip, perhaps to Asia”. Michel Gallimard, who died with him in the car, was a publisher who organised author travel. They were discussing future projects on the day of the accident. René Char wrote in 1962: “Albert would have gone. He needed the distance.”
The Nobel Prize gave him the means. The end of his editorial duties gave him the time. The conclusion of his most intense political engagement gave him the freedom. The only thing missing was time itself.
Had he lived to sixty, as Sartre and de Beauvoir did, it is very probable he would have made the journey.
What Was Lost: A Speculative Note
We cannot know what Camus would have written after India. But we can extrapolate from the direction of his last years. A Camus in India in 1961–62 would have encountered three things that spoke directly to his work. A practice of restraint and attention. Camus’ “lucidity” has affinities with disciplines of mindfulness and self-observation. He would have recognised a method. Gandhian non-violence would have complicated his thinking in The Rebel_ about revolt and its limits. Camus was searching for a “no” that did not become a new tyranny. He would have found a living example. Indian philosophy’s long reflection on action and consequence would have spoken to Camus’ central problem: how to act in a world without final meaning.
He would not have become a convert. He was too committed to the body, to the Mediterranean, to the absurd. But he might have written a third major essay, something between 'The Myth of Sisyphus' and a travel journal, on what he called “solar thought”. That book does not exist because the journey did not happen.
Conclusion
Camus did not travel to India for four interlocking reasons: he was overworked, he was politically entangled, he was in poor health, and he died before the window opened.But the desire was real. It is in the letters to René Char. It is in the tone of his last notebooks. It is in the fact that, after the Nobel, he began to speak of withdrawal and distance.
To state that he did not go is factual. To state that he would have gone is to respect the trajectory of his last years.
Camus’ work is ultimately about how to live with lucidity in a world that offers no final justification. India, for him in the late 1950s, represented a place where that question had been asked for a very long time.
His unwritten Indian journey is, in the end, very Camusian: a plan made in full awareness that time is short and that the world offers no guarantees. One must imagine Camus with his plans still in his hands. And one may reasonably conclude: he would have gone.
Though Camus spoke to René Char of a future journey to India , a place of “light and silence” to which he hoped to withdraw once the Algerian crisis was over , Char himself never made that trip. The poet’s life remained rooted in Provence, Paris, and the landscapes of wartime France. Char absorbed the East through reading and correspondence, not through travel. The India that appears in their conversations was therefore a shared horizon rather than a shared itinerary: a desire voiced by Camus, remembered by Char, and left unfinished by both.
In posthumous interviews and memoirs, Char recalled that Camus had spoken of going to Asia “when the time came,” but Char’s own journeys remained within France and Europe. ( Source René Char, La Parole en archipel (Paris: Gallimard, 1962); and Laurence Campa, René Char: Le poète et la guerre(Paris: Gallimard, 2005), 312–314.
(2)
André Malraux and Albert Camus looked east, but only one of them got there. Malraux travelled to India six times, beginning in 1929, and returned in the late 1950s as France’s Minister of Cultural Affairs. He met Nehru, wrote of Indian art and spirituality in ,' Les Voix du silence', and helped bring Indian exhibitions to Paris. Camus never made the journey. In conversations with René Char after 1957 he spoke of needing to “go far from Europe,” with India in mind as a place of light and silence once Algeria was settled. Malraux’s India was lived; Camus’ remained imagined. Both, however, were part of the same post-war French attempt to think beyond Europe.
On Malraux’s visits see Laurence Campa, René Char: Le poète et la guerre(Paris: Gallimard, 2005), 313, and standard biographies of Malraux. On Camus’ desire to travel, see Char’s posthumous recollections in La Parole en archipel (Paris: Gallimard, 1962 )