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  1. Early life and education. De Rachewiltz was born Maria Rudge in Brixen, Italy, on July 9, 1925, the daughter of Olga Rudge, a classical violinist, and Ezra Pound, who was married to Dorothy Shakespear. 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]

  2. 18 de ago. de 2023 · Dorothy Shakespear married Pound in 1914, despite the less-than-enthusiastic blessing of her parents. After their marriage, Pound would use funds received from Olivia to support T.S. Eliot and James Joyce. When Dorothy gave birth to a son, Omar Pound, in France in 1926, Olivia assumed guardianship of the boy.

  3. Dorothy Shakespear Pound (1886–1973), artist and book illustrator, married Ezra Pound (whom she had met in 1908) in 1914. See Dorothy Shakespear Pound, Etruscan Gate: A Notebook with Drawings and Watercolours (1971); Dorothy Shakespear (1886–1973): an exhibition organized by David A. Lewis (Nacogdoches, Texas: SFA Gallery, Stephen F. Austin State University, 1997); Selected Letters of Ezra ...

  4. Dorothy Shakespear (14 September 1886 – 8 December 1973 in London), daughter of novelist Olivia Shakespear, was an English artist who married American poet Ezra Pound. One of a small number of women vorticist painters, she had art work published in the short-lived but influential literary magazine BLAST. Dorothy and...

  5. 14 de jun. de 2011 · Composition in Blue and Black, c1914-15, by Dorothy Shakespear Photograph: Emerson Art Gallery Hamilton College, Estate of Omar S Pound. Share on Facebook Share on Twitter.

  6. Henry Hope Shakespear (1849 bis 1923) stammte wie auch Olivia aus einer Militärfamilie. William Butler Yeats beschrieb Henry Hope Shakespear in seinen Memoiren „Her husband, whom I saw but once, was much older and seemed a little heavy, a little without life“. Am 14. September 1886 wurde das einzige Kind des Paares, Dorothy Shakespear ...

  7. 19 de set. de 1985 · Dorothy Shakespear, one sometimes feels, was not much less imprisoned than Elizabeth Barrett had been, and in not much less need of a poet-errant to liberate her. Neither the captive nor her would-be liberator wasted much time complaining: these were the rules of the game, and the two of them could only be patient.