Fascinated by
Russian folklore, Gertsyk taught the subject in a school in
Tsarskoe Selo as well as at her family's estate in the
Crimea. Her first works were translations which she began publishing in 1899. These included works by
Alfred de Musset,
Selma Lagerlöf,
Friedrich Nietzsche,
John Ruskin, and others. She also produced translations with her sister, Eugenia and began writing poetry during her relationship with , a married lawyer and poet. He was much older than she, but their relationship inspired her to write and influenced her later works. He died suddenly in 1903 and as a result of the shock, Gertsyk partially lost her hearing. Beginning in 1905, she worked as a collaborator on the journal
Libra, publishing critiques and reviews of new books under the pseudonym
V. Syrin. 1906 she published an essay
Из мира детских игр (From the world of Children's Games), which was an acclaimed introspection. Her first significant publication of her own poems appeared in the almanac of the
Symbolists known as
Flower Garden of First Ashes that same year, as the cycle
Golden Key. The poems depict philosophical and religious symbols with references to folkloric myth. She gained praise for the works from such artists as
Konstantin Balmont,
Valery Bryusov,
Vyacheslav Ivanov,
Maximilian Voloshin, and others. Around the same time as her publication, she spent the summer of 1908 at the family estate in Sudak and remained there until the first of October. Among the guests were Vyacheslav Ivanov, and Dmitry Evgenievich Zhukovsky. In January, 1909, in
Paris, Gertsyk married Zhukovsky, a biologist, publisher, and translator of philosophical literature, who was a member of the Russian aristocracy and well-to-do. The poet Maximilian Voloshin served as the best man at the wedding. By the following August, their first child, Daniyl was born. In 1910, her collection
Стихотворения (Poems) was published and earned responses from the same group of noted poets, which was unusual praise for a Russian woman. In 1911, she published an autobiographical novella,
О том, чго не было (About That Which Never Was) in the journal
Russian Thought. From 1910 to 1917, Gertsyk published in the journals "Северные записки" (Northern Notes), "Альманах Муз" (Muses' Almanac) among others pursuing
aesthetic themes. The couple hosted literary salons which were widely attended by some of the most noted intellectuals of the day. She became friends with and was influenced by
Sergei Bulgakov to convert from Lutheranism to
Russian Orthodoxy. At one of these events in early 1911, Voloshin brought the young poet
Marina Tsvetaeva. The two became steadfast friends and it would later be Gertsyk who introduced Tsvetaeva to
Sophia Parnok in 1914. In 1913, she gave birth to her second son, Nikita. Following the autobiographical novella cycle, Gertsyk published two more,
Мои романы (My Loves, 1913) and
Мои блуждания (My Wanderings, 1915). During the war years encompassing
World War I and the
Russian Civil War, the family lived in the Crimea, first staying in the home Gertsyk's father had built in 1880. As they had in Moscow, the couple hosted salons for members of the intelligentsia, which included their friends from Moscow, and others like
Lyudmila Erarskaya, Parnok, ,
Alexander Spendiaryan, as well as the threesome
Polyxena Solovyova, her partner,
Natalia Manaseina, and Manaseina's husband Mikhail. The group discussed literature and philosophy, staged performances and even published a literary newsletter. In 1914, as the older home needed renovations, the couple decided to build their own house in
Sudak, which took two years to complete. They moved in in 1916, but did not enjoy it for long, as when the
Red Terror reached the Crimea in 1920, their gatherings were banned. The
famine seriously impacted her children, nearly killing them and then in January, 1921, Gertsyk was arrested. She spent three weeks imprisoned in Sudak and used the time to write a cycle of poems called
Подвальные (The Cellar). After her release, she expanded some of these into a series of longer pieces,
Подвальные очерки (Cellar Essays, 1924-1925). Some of these were printed in 1926 in the magazine
Перезвоны (Chimes) in
Riga. All dealt with the question of the border between life and death wherein people on the verge of death leave behind their earthly pleasures and seek truth. ==Death and legacy==