Born in 1903 in New York City, Countee
Cullen was raised in a Methodist parsonage.
He attended De Witt Clinton High School in
New York and began writing poetry at the age
of fourteen. In 1922, Cullen entered New York
University. His poems were published in The
Crisis, under the leadership of W. E. B. Du
Bois, and Opportunity, a magazine of the National Urban League. He was
soon after published in Harper’s, the Century Magazine, and Poetry. He
won several awards for his poem, “Ballad of the Brown Girl,” and graduated
from New York University in 1923. That same year, Harper published his
first volume of verse, Color, and he was admitted to Harvard University
where he completed a master’s degree.
His second volume of poetry, Copper Sun (1927), met with controversy in
the black community because Cullen did not give the subject of race the
same attention he had given it in Color. He was raised and educated in a
primarily white community, and he differed from other poets of the Harlem
Renaissance like Langston Hughes in that he lacked the background to
comment from personal experience on the lives of other blacks or use
popular black themes in his writing. An imaginative lyric poet, he wrote in
the tradition of Keats and Shelley and was resistant to the new poetic
techniques of the Modernists. He died in 1946.