Cull of April

Cull of April

2nd ed.

Paperback (14 Feb 2024)

  • $12.57
Add to basket

Includes delivery to the United States

10+ copies available online - Usually dispatched within 7 days

Publisher's Synopsis

Cull of April (Cueille d'avril in French) is the first book of poetry written by Francis Vielé-Griffin (1864-1937). It was first published in 1885, when Griffin was 21 years old. Griffin was American by birth, born in Virginia. As a boy of seven or eight years old, he was sent to France to attend school; he remained.


Cull of April is said to show influences of the Decadent school of poetry, which was in vogue at the time.


Here is what Émile Goudeau says about the Decadents, in his who's who of Belle Epoque poets and artists, Ten Years a Bohemian: "The newcomers rallied around master Verlaine, or chief Mallarmé, and from there come the Decadents (of which the Deliquescents are nothing but parodists), the Symbolists, and the Instrumentalists.... the word decadent implies, beyond affectation of style, a certain disorder fundamentally, a hybrid blend of old religions and refined mores; that was also what the decadents strived for; a particular sadism where Catholic incense is detected in loathsome places, and where the sanctuary has foul smells of face powder or even washbasin water."


Perhaps he was right, here's a line from "Euphonies," in Cull of April, which would seem to corroborate:


I ramble on return from vain lassitudes,

Have we not dreamt of other beatitudes?


Book information

ISBN: 9781955392570
Publisher: Sunny Lou Publishing
Imprint: Sunny Lou Publishing
Pub date:
Edition: 2nd ed.
Language: English
Number of pages: 60
Weight: 100g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm
Spine width: 4mm