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  1. Adelaida Gertsyk (Russian: Аделаида Казимировна Герцык, 16 February 1874 – 25 June 1925) was a Russian translator, poet and writer of the Silver Age. Her literary salons of the 19th and early 20th century brought many of the poets of the age together.

  2. Gertsyk, Adelaida (1874–1925) Russian poet and short-story writer. Name variations: Adelaida Kazimirovna Gértsyk; (pseudonym) Sirin. Born 1874 near Moscow, Russia; died 1925; dau. of a Polish noble; sister of Evgenia or Eugenie Gertsyk.

  3. Gertsyk, Adelaida (1874 - 1925) — Russian poet, writer, and translator in her own right, Adelaida was friends with many major figures of the Silver Age, including philosophers Lev Shestov and Sergei Bulgakov and poets Maximilian Voloshin and Marina Tsvetaeva.

  4. Olga Obukhova's introduction of Adelaida Gertsyk (1874-1925) is a balanced contribution to the history of Russian feminism, feminine writing and Russian symbolism.

  5. Adelaida Gertsyk (16 February 1874 — 25 June 1925) Alternative Names/Transliterations: Adelaida Kazimirovna Gertsyk; Аделаида Казимировна Герцык (Russian)

  6. 22 de sept. de 2009 · Kelly, Catriona, “Reluctant Sibyls: Gender and Intertextuality in the Work of Adelaida Gertsyk and Vera Merkur'eva,” in Sandler (ed.), Rereading Russian Poetry. New Haven, CT, 1999, 129—45

  7. the poets Adelaida Gertsyk and Poliksena Solovieva, and artist Кonstantin Bogaevsky, and reported their enthusiastic responses. Gertsyk immediately wrote to Voloshin that the poem “The Holy Rus’” moved and fascinated her, commenting that he had a new “sense of the native land,” and that no