Two of his most well-known poems are An Honest Song (Iskrena pesma), A Desperate Song (Očajna pesma), Jefimija, Simonida and At Gazi-Mestan (Na Gazi-Mestanu).
Milan Rakić wrote a lyric poem about her named Simonida, and Milutin Bojić wrote a psychological drama called Kraljeva Jesen ("King's autumn") about her.
Milan | A.C. Milan | University of Milan | Inter Milan | Milan Kundera | Duchy of Milan | Piccolo Teatro (Milan) | Milan Obrenović | Victor Milan | province of Milan | Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milan | Milan Stanković | Milan Rakić | University of Milan Bicocca | Province of Milan | Milan Vidmar | Milan suburban railway service | Milan Stojadinović | Gang War in Milan | Milan Stitt | Milan Stepanov | Milan Mandarić | Milan Hejduk | Milan Cathedral | IULM University of Milan | Sant'Angelo (Milan) | Piazza del Duomo, Milan | Milan Vukcevich | Milan Spasić (naval lieutenant) | Milan Spasić |
There he met and socialized with famous poets of that era: Svetozar Ćorović, Jovan Dučić, Osman Đikić, Milan Rakić.
He is the winner of the following literary prizes: “Isidora Sekulić,” “Milan Rakić,” “Branko Miljković,” “The Award of Prosveta,” “The Seal of Town of Sremski Karlovci,” “Pegasus,” “Marble Medallion and Sounds.”
Of the best known Serbian poets who looked up to him during that period were Milorad Mitrović, Mileta Jakšić, Aleksa Šantić, Danica Marković, and for a short while even Jovan Dučić, who soon went on to abandon Vojislavism for a new literary wave that Dučić and Milan Rakić would ultimately espouse, influenced by the French poets.