Career
He was considered to be one of the finest poetic talents in the finance de siècle Kingdom of Bulgaria. His life and work are closely connected with the liberation movement Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization in Macedonia. He was also a supporter of the Armenian Independence Movement, and wrote a number of poems about Armenians.
Most of his poems are romantic in subject, and dedicated to the two women in his life — Mina Todorova and Lora Karavelova.
His first (and arguably greatest) love Mina died from tubercolosis, which greatly saddened Yavorov. She was buried in the cemetery of Boulogne Billancourt.
Later on he met Lora, the daughter of statesman Petko Karavelov. In 1913, Lora shot herself and Yavorov tried to commit suicide.
The bullet went through his temporal bone, which left him blind.
In despair over the trial provoked by Lora"s death and the rumor that he had killed her, Yavorov poisoned and then shot himself in autumn 1914, at the age of 36.