Isaac Yakovlevich Pavlovsky, a friend of Anton Chekhov, was born in 1853 in the city of Taganrog, studied at Taganrog's Boys Gymnasium, was an activist at the Taganrog revolutionary circle and was arrested and tried at the so-called Trial of the 193. He became a political immigrant in 1878. He made his debut as journalist in Le Temps in 1880 with the story about his imprisonment En Cellule.
In 1888, Isaac Pavlovsky returned to Russia and worked for the Novoye Vremya, where he published his Paris correspondence.
Among his publications are: Little people with great sorrow ("ÃÂðûõýÃÂúøõ ûÃÂôø àñþûÃÂÃÂøü óþÃÂõü", Saint Petersburg, 1889), Sketches of Contemporary Spain ("ÃÂÃÂõÃÂúø ÃÂþòÃÂõüõýýþù ÃÂÃÂÿðýøø", Saint Petersburg, 1889), There and Back ("âÃÂôð ø þñÃÂðÃÂýþ", Saint Petersburg, 1891), Paris Sketches ("ÃÂðÃÂøöÃÂúøõ þÃÂõÃÂúø") and other works.