[1] Upon graduating in 1911, he attempted to attend the law faculty of the University of Bucharest, but gave up, likely due to material difficulties.
His work was also published in Convorbiri critice, Literatorul, Flacăra, Sburătorul, Grădina Hesperidelor, Cugetul românesc, Revista Fundațiilor Regale, Universul literar and Gândirea.
[1] Around 1909, he was attracted to Symbolism, passionately reading Paul Verlaine, Stephane Mallarmé, Henri de Régnier, Maurice Maeterlinck and Henrik Ibsen; he particularly admired Emile Verhaeren, whom he considered a "social symbolist".
[2] He was a delicate Symbolist who wrote poems of a light and fluid melancholy that did not deal with serious problems or grave issues.
He published translations of Charles Baudelaire (whom he considered a precursor of Symbolism),[3] Victor Hugo, Francis de Croisset, Molière, Maxence Van Der Meersch, Jean Giono, and Jules Renard.