Background
Mary Rudge was born in Brixen, Italy, on July 9, 1925, the daughter of Olga Rudge, a classical violinist, and Ezra Pound, a poet married to another woman. 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.
She grew up on a farm speaking the local dialect, but when she was older she began to join her mother, and sometimes Pound, at Olga"s house in Venice.
Career
There Mary Rudge was exposed to a world of culture, literature and politics. As a teenager she moved away from the mountains and at that point, Pound took her education in hand. During World World War II her mother lost possession of her house in Venice, and Mary moved for a period with Olga to Rapallo.
During this period, Rudge worked in a German hospital in Italy.
When she returned to Rapallo, she found her father had been arrested on treason charges because of his broadcasts. He was being held at the "Disciplinary Training Center" in Pisa.
Pound was taken from Pisa to the United States, where he was found mentally incompetent for trial. On his release, Pound returned to Italy.
In 1946 at the age of 21, Mary had married Egyptologist Boris de Rachewiltz.
Their son was born in 1947, followed by a daughter two years later. They bought and renovated for their residence Brunnenburg Castle in the Italian Tyrol. Years later in 1971 she published an autobiography, Discretions.
The following year her father died in Venice.
In the 1980s de Rachewiltz published the first dual-language edition of her father"s epic poem, The Cantos, which he began work on in the years before 1915 and continued throughout his life until his death. She is curator of the Ezra Pound Archive, Center for the Study of Ezra Pound and His Contemporaries, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, at Yale University.
De Rachewiltz studied at Radcliffe between 1973 and 1975. She has since presented lectures about her father"s work and modernism throughout the United States and Canada.