Pavlyk wrote articles, essays and poems. Her article
My and human sins, and lordly and popish truth is devoted to the injustice of the authorities. She wrote the essay
Zaribnytsia (Almanac "The First Wreath", 1887). Pavlyk also wrote poems in which she strongly spoke out against the injustice of the authorities, the extortion of priests (
Dishonesty, ''Pope's Conscience
, Judgment of Fools
), journalistic articles (A sample of a peasant farmer from Kosiv''), recorded folklore.
Mykhailo Drahomanov's sister -
Olga Drahomanova-Kosach (literary pseudonym Olena Pchilka), who met Anna Pavlyk through Ivan Franko, was interested in the work of the talented writer. In 1887, together with
Nataliya Kobrynska, Pavlyk published an
almanac of women's works - authors of Galicia and Naddnipro region
The First Wreath, in which Pavlyk's short story was printed. In the 1920s, Pavlyk, who remained single, helped orphans from village Monastyrske, and intended to build an orphanage and a house on specially purchased land where sick Ukrainian writers could come for rest and creative work. Still, she failed to realize this intention due to sudden death. Anna Pavlyk died on 13 October 1928 in the city of
Lviv, where she was buried. In Kosiv, one of the streets is named after her. == References ==