Template:Short description Template:For Template:Expand Esperanto Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox writer

William Auld (6 November 1924 – 11 September 2006) was a British poet, author, translator and magazine editor who wrote chiefly in Esperanto.

LifeEdit

Auld was born at Erith in Kent, and then moved to Glasgow with his parents, attending Allan Glen's School. After wartime service as a spitfire pilot in the Royal Air Force, he studied English literature at Glasgow University, and then qualified as a teacher.<ref>Obituary Template:Webarchive The Scotsman; accessed 4 December 2016.</ref>

In 1952 he married his childhood sweetheart Margaret (Meta) Barr Stewart, also an Esperantist, and had two children. In 1960, he was appointed to a secondary school in Alloa and he remained there for the rest of his life. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1999, 2004, and 2006, making him the first person nominated for works in Esperanto.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

His masterpiece, La infana raso (The Infant Race), is a long poem that, in Auld's words, explores "the role of the human race in time and in the cosmos," and is partly based on The Cantos by Ezra Pound.<ref>(en) Paul Gubbins, William Auld, The Guardian, 19. Sept. 2006</ref>

Auld began to learn Esperanto in 1937 but only became active in the propagation of the language in 1947, and from then on wrote many works in Esperanto. He edited various magazines and reviews, including Esperanto en Skotlando (1949–1955), Esperanto (1955–1958, 1961–1962), Monda Kulturo (1962–1963), Norda Prismo (1968–1972), La Brita Esperantisto (1973–1999) and Fonto (1980–1987).<ref>William Auld, Transparent Language, 30. April 2009</ref>

He was Vice President of the Universal Esperanto Association (1977–1980), President of the Academy of Esperanto (1979–1983), and President of the Esperanto PEN Centre (1999–2005). He donated his personal collection of nearly 5000 books in and about Esperanto to the National Library of Scotland, where it is now housed,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> in 2001.Template:Citation needed

He died in Dolair/Dollar, Clackmannanshire, and is buried in Dollar churchyard. The grave lies on the approach path to the church from the main road.Template:Citation needed

List of worksEdit

Collected poetryEdit

  • Spiro de l' pasio (in Kvaropo, 1952)
  • La infana raso (1956)
  • Unufingraj melodioj (1960)
  • Humoroj (1969)
  • Rimleteroj (with Marjorie Boulton, 1976)
  • El unu verda vivo (1978)
  • En barko senpilota (Edistudio, 1987)
  • Unu el ni (1992)

AnthologiesEdit

  • Angla antologio 1000–1800 (poetry editor, 1957)
  • Esperanta antologio (1958/1984)
  • 25 jaroj (poetry editor, 1977)
  • Skota antologio (associate editor, 1978)
  • Sub signo de socia muzo (1987)
  • Nova Esperanta Krestomatio (1991)
  • Plena poemaro: Miĥalski (ed. 1994)
  • Tempo fuĝas (1996)

Translations from EnglishEdit

TranslationsEdit

Song collectionsEdit

  • Floroj sen kompar' (with Margaret Hill, 1973), British folksongs translated into Esperanto
  • Kantanta mia bird' (with Margaret Hill, 1973), British folksongs translated into Esperanto
  • Dum la noktoj (with Margaret and David Hill, 1976), original songs

TextbooksEdit

  • Esperanto: A New Approach; (1965)
  • Paŝoj al plena posedo (1968)
  • A first course in Esperanto (1972)
  • Traduku! (1993)

BibliographiesEdit

Bibliografio de tradukoj el la angla lingvo (with E. Grimley Evans, 1996)

Essay collectionsEdit

  • Facetoj de Esperanto (1976)
  • Pri lingvo kaj aliaj artoj (1978)
  • Enkonduko en la originalan literaturon de Esperanto (1979)
  • Vereco, distro, stilo (1981)
  • Kulturo kaj internacia lingvo (1986)
  • La fenomeno Esperanto (1988)
  • La skota lingvo, hodiaŭ kaj hieraŭ (1988)

Miscellaneous literatureEdit

Pajleroj kaj stoploj: elektitaj prozaĵoj (1997)

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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