As a high school student, he graduated top of his class at the Šabac gymnasium in 1895. He went to Law School in Belgrade's Grandes écoles where he graduated summa cum laude. He was one of the founders of the magazine Slovenski jug. During the Great War, he was a correspondent of the newspaper Srpska Novine in Corfu.[4] Nowadays, he is best remembered for Izgnanici: albanska odiceja (Akcionarska Štamparija, 1924)[5] and Kniga stihova (Vreme, 1920).[6]
Poljska bolnica: komad u stihovima (The Field Hospital: Poems, 1928);
Izgnanici: albanska odiceja, u tri dela, u stihu[8](Exodus: The Albanian Odyssey in three acts, 1924);
Ezop Teodora Banvila (Ezop Teodor Banville, 1922); and many translations from Slovenian and Bulgarian.[4]
He wrote for such publications as Iskra, the Serbian literary periodical Delo, Brankovo kolo, Bosanska vila and others. His now-famous verses are carved on the monument of deceased soldiers and officers of the Drina division in the village of Agios Mateos in Corfu:[9]