Touch the screen or click to continue...
Checking your browser...
ditchas.pages.dev


Mary de rachewiltz biography template

          Ezra (Weston Loomis) Pound may well be the most famous (and perhaps misun- derstood) American literary figure born west of the Mississippi.

        1. Ezra (Weston Loomis) Pound may well be the most famous (and perhaps misun- derstood) American literary figure born west of the Mississippi.
        2. Mary Rudge de Rachewiltz was born on 9 July at the Sanitoria della citta Bressanone high in the Alto Adige.
        3. Mary de Rachewiltz (–) is an American poet and translator.
        4. Mary de Rachewiltz, giving most of her life to the tireless effort to bring Pound the recognition he deserves, is also a fine poet in her own right.
        5. Although she was born and has lived in Italy all her life, she holds American citizenship.
        6. Mary de Rachewiltz (–) is an American poet and translator..

          Mary de Rachewiltz

          Italian-American poet and translator (born )

          Mary de Rachewiltz (born Maria Rudge; July 9, ) is an Italian-American[1] poet and translator.

          She is the daughter of the American poet Ezra Pound, whose The Cantos she translated into Italian. Her childhood memoir Discretions was published in

          Early life and education

          De Rachewiltz was born Maria Rudge in Brixen, Italy, on July 9, , the daughter of Olga Rudge, a classical violinist, and Ezra Pound, who was married to Dorothy Shakespear.

          Mary De Rachewiltz, Ezra Pound's year-old daughter, has gone to court to stop a neofascist organisation using her father's name.

          Her mother placed the girl in the care of a peasant couple after her birth; she was raised on their farm in Gais in the Italian Tyrol.[1] She grew up on a farm speaking the local dialect of German, but when she was older, she began to join her mother, and sometimes Pound, at Olga's house in Venice.

          There Maria was exposed to a world of culture, literature and politics. In the Tyrolean village, she had access to only two books, but when with her pare