» romance (music) by Mikhail Steinberg, poem by Stepan Skitalets, performed by
Nina Dulkevitsch, 1914 In 1898 he met
Maxim Gorky, whose fame was already on the rise, and the two became close friends. This meeting was the deciding point of his young life. Skitalets came to Moscow with Gorky where he joined the
Sreda, a literary group founded by the writer
Nikolay Teleshov, which included many of Russia's most popular authors and artists, such as
Leonid Andreyev,
Ivan Bunin,
Fyodor Chaliapin, Gorky and, when he was in town,
Anton Chekhov. In 1902 Skitalets's first collection of stories and poems was published by Gorky's company
Znanie (Knowledge). During this time he published poetry, short stories, and novellas, most of which were read and discussed among his friends in the Sreda. One of his songs, which he first sang at a meeting of the Sreda, was included in the beginning of the second act of Gorky's play
The Lower Depths. The song begins with the lines:
The sun rises and sets / But my prison is dark, dark. He was also the author of a popular folk song about
Stepan Razin. Skitalets's revolutionary poetry was praised by
Vladimir Lenin among others. One of his revolutionary poems, recited at a charity event in 1902, can be found on the
List of Russian language poets. His reading of this poem and several others caused an uproar of cheers and shouts, leading to the event being broken up by the police, and to the arrest of Leonid Andreyev, who'd been the event's organizer. Andreyev was eventually acquitted in court. Skitalets was arrested for his revolutionary activities in 1888, 1901 (with Gorky in
Nizhny Novgorod), 1902 and 1905. He continued publishing his works separately and in collected editions through the years leading up to
World War I and the
Russian Revolution of 1917. ==Later life==