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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Omar_PoundOmar Pound - Wikipedia

    Omar Shakespear Pound (10 September 1926 – 2 March 2010) was an Anglo-American writer, teacher, and translator. The son of Ezra Pound and his wife Dorothy Shakespear , Pound was the author of Arabic & Persian Poems (1970) and co-author of Wyndham Lewis: A Descriptive Bibliography (1978).

    • 2
    • French
    • BA in anthropology and French (1954), MA in Islamic Studies (1958).
    • Elizabeth Stevenson Parkin
  2. Friday March 26 2010, 4.57pm, The Times. Omar Pound was a gifted poet and an internationally recognised translator of Persian and Arabic poetry. To these two crafts he brought verbal dexterity,...

  3. 2 de mar. de 2010 · Omar Shakespear Pound. Died. March 02, 2010. edit data. A gifted poet and translator in his own right, Omar Pound was the son of the artist Dorothy Shakespear, married at one time to Ezra Pound. By the time Pound had taken up with his lifelong love, violinist Olga Rudge, Shakespear had fled to Italy and given birth to her son, who bore Ezra ...

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    • March 2, 2010
  4. When Artful Dodge was beginning work on its special section of writing from the Middle East, I was fortunate to meet Omar Pound, perhaps the most significant translator of Persian and Arabic classical texts since Edward Fitzgerald started on the quatrains of Omar Khayam.

  5. 28 de nov. de 2011 · Among the generous benefactors to India Office Private Papers is the late Dr Omar Pound (1926-2010), teacher, writer and translator of Persian and Arabic literature, only son of the celebrated American poet Ezra Pound and his English wife, artist Dorothy Shakespear.

  6. 28 November 2011. Tales from the other Shakespears. Among the generous benefactors to India Office Private Papers is the late Dr Omar Pound (1926-2010), teacher, writer and translator of Persian and Arabic literature, only son of the celebrated American poet Ezra Pound and his English wife, artist Dorothy Shakespear.

  7. edition of Pound's correspondence with Alice Corbin Henderson, which is currently in press with the University of Texas Press; Hugh Witemeyer is also finishing an edition of Pound's letters with Bronson Cutting; and Mr. Omar Pound has nearly completed anoth-er volume of letters between Ezra and Dorothy Pound, this one covering the period when