Francis Vielé-Griffin (pseudonym of Egbert Ludovicus Viélé, 26 May 1864 – 12 November 1937), was a French symbolist poet. He was born at Norfolk, Virginia, USA, the son of General Egbert Ludovicus Viele, and moved to France with his mother (the former Teresa Griffin) in 1872.[1]
Vielé-Griffin was educated in France and divided his time between Paris and Touraine. He was a writer of vers libre and founded the highly influential journal Entretiens politiques et littéraires (1890–92).[2]
He wrote symbolist and vers-libre poetry. His first collection, Cueille d'avril, appeared in 1885. He practiced a relaxed prosody, which did not take into account the obligatory alternation of masculine and feminine rhymes, the prohibition to rhyme a plural with a singular, replaces the rhyme with an assonance, if not neglected here and there the rhyme or assonancer:
Cueille d'avril (1885) (Cull of April, in English translation by Sunny Lou Publishing: ISBN978-1-95539-218-1, 2021)
Les Cygnes (1887; new series, 1892) (Swans, in English translation by Sunny Lou Publishing: ISBN978-1-95539-230-3, 2022)
Ancaeus (1885–87), a dramatic poem
Joies (1889) (Joys, in English translation by Sunny Lou Publishing: ISBN978-1-95539-221-1, 2022)
Fleurs du Chemin et Chansons de la Route (1893) ("Flowers of the Path" and "Songs of the Journey" included in The Ride of Yeldis & Other Poems, in English translation by Sunny Lou Publishing: ISBN978-1-95539-239-6, 2023)
La Chevauchée d'Yeldis (1893) (The Ride of Yeldis & Other Poems, in English translation by Sunny Lou Publishing: ISBN978-1-95539-239-6, 2023)
Swanhilde, a dramatic poem (1894)
Laus Veneris (1895), a volume of translations from Swinburne
Poèmes et Poésies (1895), a collection containing much of his earlier work
Phocas le jardinier (1898)
La Légende ailee de Wieland le Forgeron (1899), a dramatic poem.