Gertsyk began her career as a translator, working on translations of writers such as
Edward Carpenter,
Joris-Karl Huysmans,
William James, and
Friedrich Nietzsche, among others. She also wrote translations with her sister, of the works of
Jean-Marie Guyau,
Immanuel Kant, and Nietzsche. She published critical essays and articles, like
Бесоискательство в тихом омуте (Unclaimed in a Quiet Pool), published in 1906 in
Golden Fleece magazine about
Dmitri Merezhkovsky. In 1906 and again in 1913, she traveled to
Rome, describing her impressions in the essay
My Rome. The second trip was made after her conversion from Lutheranism to
Russian Orthodoxy in 1911. She became a close friend of the poet,
Vyacheslav Ivanov, defending his classicist style against more modern trends in Russian literature and wrote an article
Религия страдающего Бога (
The Religion of the Suffering God) about him. Between 1915 and 1917, she lived with her sister Adelaida at her home in Moscow. During the
Russian Revolution the entire family, including her brother, Vladimir and his family, lived in
Sudak. The intellectual community living in the Crimea included such people as the actress
Lyudmila Erarskaya, poet
Sophia Parnok, composer and musician
Alexander Spendiarov, the poet
Maximilian Voloshin, and the threesome,
Polyxena Solovyova, her partner,
Natalia Manaseina, and Manaseina's husband Mikhail. As a group, the intellectual community worked on productions for their own entertainment. Parnok and both Gertsyk sisters wrote verse, Spendiarov wrote songs, and Erarskaya staged plays, Parnok viewed Gertsyk as a spiritual mother, someone who was helping her mature in her devotion. Letters exchanged with other intellectuals like
Nikolai Berdyaev, who called her the "most remarkable woman of the twentieth century", and
Lydia Berdyaev reflect her philosophical nature and quest to understand man's place in the universe. The family home in Moscow was
nationalized during the war, forcing the Gertsyk clan to remain in Crimea, despite the desperate conditions and
famines. Her sister died in Sudak in 1925 and the following year, Adelaide's husband Dmitry Evgenievich Zhukovsky was banished to the
Vologda Oblast. In 1927, Gertsyk, along with Vladimir, his invalid wife Lyubov Aleksandrovna, and their daughter Veronika moved to the
Caucasus. Gertsyk provided the constant care and nursing needed by Lyubov Aleksandrovna, who had
polyarthritis, and helped with raising her niece. They lived in various places, such as
Kislovodsk, where they remained for eleven years. Then they briefly lived in
Zelenchuk and
Batalpashinsk, before moving to the
Central Chernozem Reserve. Around this same time, Gertsyk began to write her memoirs in 1936 and continued her wide correspondence with many Russian
émigrés. In 1941, the reserve was evacuated and the family moved to the small village of Zelenaya Steppe. During the
Nazi Occupation, which lasted from 1941 to 1943 her sister-in-law died and Gertsyk finished her memoirs. ==Death and legacy==