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Thomas Moore

Thomas Moore (28 May 1779 – 25 February 1852) was an Irish writer, poet, and lyricist celebrated for his Irish Melodies. Their setting of English-language verse to old Irish tunes marked the transition in popular Irish culture from Irish to English. Politically, Moore was recognised in England as a press, or "squib", writer for the aristocratic Whigs; in Ireland he was accounted a Catholic patriot.

Thomas Moore
Thomas Moore, after a painting by Thomas Lawrence
Born(1779-05-28)28 May 1779
Dublin, Ireland
Died25 February 1852(1852-02-25) (aged 72)
Sloperton Cottage, Bromham, Wiltshire, England
OccupationWriter, poet, lyricist
EducationSamuel Whyte's English Grammar School, Dublin; Trinity College, Dublin; Middle Temple, London
Notable worksIrish Melodies
Memoirs of Captain Rock
Lalla Rookh
Letters & Journals of Lord Byron
SpouseElizabeth Dyke

Married to a Protestant actress and hailed as "Anacreon Moore" after the classical Greek composer of drinking songs and erotic verse, Moore did not profess religious piety. Yet in the controversies that surrounded Catholic Emancipation, Moore was seen to defend the tradition of the Church in Ireland against both evangelising Protestants and uncompromising lay Catholics. Longer prose works reveal more radical sympathies. The Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald depicts the United Irish leader as a martyr in the cause of democratic reform. Complementing Maria Edgeworth's Castle Rackrent, Memoirs of Captain Rock[1] is a saga, not of Anglo-Irish landowners, but of their exhausted tenants driven to the semi-insurrection of "Whiteboyism".

Today Moore is remembered almost alone either for his Irish Melodies (typically "The Minstrel Boy" and "The Last Rose of Summer") or, less generously, for the role he is thought to have played in the loss of the memoirs of his friend Lord Byron.

Early life and artistic launch

Thomas Moore was born to Anastasia Codd from Wexford and John Moore from Kerry over his parents' grocery shop in Aungier Street, Dublin,[2] He had two younger sisters, Kate and Ellen. Moore showed an early interest in music and performance, staging musical plays with his friends and entertaining hope of being an actor. In Dublin he attended Samuel Whyte's co-educational English grammar school,[3] where he was schooled in Latin and Greek and became fluent in French and Italian. By age fourteen he had had one of his poems published in a new literary magazine called the Anthologia Hibernica (“Irish Anthology”).[4]

Samuel Whyte had taught Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Irish playwright and English Whig politician, of whom Moore later was to write a biography.[5]

Trinity College and the United Irishmen

In 1795, Moore was among the first Catholics admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, preparing, as his mother had hoped, for a career in law. Through his friends at Trinity, Robert Emmett and Edward Hudson, Moore was connected to the popular politics of the capital agitated by the French Revolution and by the prospect of a French invasion. With their encouragement, in 1797, Moore wrote an appeal to his fellow students to resist the proposal, then being canvassed by the English-appointed Dublin Castle administration, to secure Ireland by incorporating the kingdom in a union with Great Britain. In April 1798, Moore was interrogated at Trinity but acquitted on the charge of being a party, through the Society of United Irishmen, to sedition.[6]

Moore had not taken the United Irish oath with Emmett and Hudson, and he played no part in the republican rebellion of 1798 (Moore was at home, ill in bed),[6] or in the conspiracy for which Emmett was executed in 1803.[7] Later, in a biography of the United Irish leader Lord Edward Fitzgerald (1831),[8] he made clear his sympathies, not hiding his regret that the French expedition under General Hoche failed in December 1796 to effect a landing.[9] To Emmett's sacrifice on the gallows Moore pays homage in the song "O, Breathe Not His Name" (1808). More veiled references to Emmet are found in the long oriental poem "Lalla Rookh" (1817).[6]

London society and first success

 
Moore as a young man

In 1799, Moore continued his law studies at Middle Temple in London. The impecunious student was assisted by friends in the expatriate Irish community in London, including Barbara, widow of Arthur Chichester, 1st Marquess of Donegall, the landlord and borough-owner of Belfast.[10]

Moore's translations of Anacreon, celebrating wine, women and song, were published in 1800 with a dedication to the Prince of Wales. His introduction to the future prince regent and King, George IV was a high point in Moore's ingratiation with aristocratic and literary circles in London, a success due in great degree to his talents as a singer and songwriter. In the same year he collaborated briefly as a librettist with Michael Kelly in the comic opera, The Gypsy Prince, staged at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket,[11]

In 1801, Moore hazarded a collection of his own verse: Poetical Works of the Late Thomas Little Esq.. The pseudonym may have been advised by their juvenile eroticism. Moore's celebration of kisses and embraces skirted contemporary standards of propriety. When these tightened in the Victorian era, they were to put an end to what was a relative publishing success.[5][12]

Travels and family

Observations of America and duel with critic

In the hope of future advancement, Moore reluctantly sailed from London in 1803 to take up a government post secured through the favours of Francis Rawdon-Hastings, 2nd Earl of Moira. Lord Moira was a man distinct in his class for having, on the eve of the rebellion in Ireland, continued to protest government and loyalist outrages,[13] and to have urged a policy of conciliation.[14] Moore was to be the registrar of the Admiralty Prize Court in Bermuda. Although as late as 1925 still recalled as "the poet laureate" of the island, Moore found life on Bermuda sufficiently dull that after six months he appointed a deputy and left for an extended tour of North America.[15] As in London, Moore secured high-society introductions in the United States including to the President, Thomas Jefferson. Repelled by the provincialism of the average American, Moore consorted with exiled European aristocrats, come to recover their fortunes, and with oligarchic Federalists from whom he received what he later conceded was a "twisted and tainted" view of the new republic.[5]

Following his return to England in 1804, Moore published Epistles, Odes, and Other Poems (1806). In addition to complaints about America and Americans (including their defence of slavery), this catalogued Moore's real and imagined escapades with American women. Francis Jeffrey denounced the volume in the Edinburgh Review (July 1806), calling Moore "the most licentious of modern versifiers", a poet whose aim is "to impose corruption upon his readers, by concealing it under the mask of refinement."[5] Moore challenged Jeffrey to a duel but their confrontation was interrupted by the police. In what seemed to be a "pattern" in Moore's life ("it was possible to condemn [Moore] only if you did not know him"), the two then became fast friends.[16]

Moore, nonetheless, was dogged by the report that the police had found that the pistol given to Jeffrey was unloaded. In his satirical English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809), Byron, who had himself been stung by one of Jeffrey's reviews, suggested Moore's weapon was also "leadless": "on examination, the balls of the pistols, like the courage of the combatants, were found to have evaporated". To Moore, this was scarcely more satisfactory, and he wrote to Byron implying that unless the remarks were clarified, Byron, too, would be challenged. In the event, when Byron, who had been abroad, returned there was again reconciliation and a lasting friendship.[17][5]

In 1809, Moore was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia.[18]

Marriage and children

Between 1808 and 1810, Moore appeared each year in Kilkenny, Ireland, with a charitable mixed repertory of professional players and high-society amateurs. He favoured comic roles in plays like Sheridan's The Rivals and O'Keeffe's The Castle of Andalusia.[19] Among the professionals, on stage in Kilkenny with her sister, the tragedienne-to-be Mary Ann Duff, was Elizabeth "Bessy" Dyke.[20] In 1811, Moore married Bessy in St Martin-in-the-Fields, London. Together with Bessy's lack of a dowry, the Protestant ceremony may have been the reason why Moore kept the match for some time secret from his parents. Bessy shrank from fashionable society to such an extent that many of her husband's friends never met her (some of them jokingly doubted her very existence). Those who did held her in high regard.[5]

The couple first set up house in London, then in the country at Kegworth, Leicestershire,[21][22][23] and in Lord Moira's neighbourhood at Mayfield Cottage in [Staffordshire], and finally in Sloperton Cottage in Wiltshire near the country seat of another close friend, Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne. Their company included Sheridan and John Philpot Curran, both in their bitter final years.[24]

Tom and Bessy had five children, none of whom survived them. Three girls died young, and both sons lost their lives as young men. One of them, Thomas Landsdowne Parr Moore, as a lowly officer fought first with the British Army in Afghanistan, and then with French Foreign Legion in Algeria. He was dying of tuberculosis that riddled the family when, according to Foreign Legion records, he was killed in action on 6 February 1846.[25] Despite these heavy personal losses, the marriage of Thomas Moore is generally regarded to have been a happy one.[5]

Debt exile, last meeting with Byron

In 1818, it was discovered that the man Moore had appointed his deputy in Bermuda had embezzled 6,000 pounds sterling, a large sum for which Moore was liable. To escape debtor's prison, in September 1819, Moore left for France, travelling with Lord John Russell (future Whig prime minister and editor of Moore's journals and letters). In Venice in October, Moore saw Byron for the last time. Byron entrusted him with a manuscript for his memoirs, which, as his literary executor, Moore promised to have published after Byron's death.[26]

In Paris, Moore was joined by Bessy and the children. His social life was busy, often involving meetings with Irish and British and travellers such as Maria Edgeworth and William Wordsworth. But his attempt to bridge the gulf in his connections between his exiled fellow countrymen and members of the British establishment was not always successful. In 1821, several emigres, prominent among them Myles Byrne (veteran of Vinegar Hill and of Napoleon's Irish Legion) refused to attend a St Patrick's day dinner Moore had organised in Paris because of the presiding presence of Wellesley Pole Long, a nephew of the Duke of Wellington.[27]

Once Moore learned the Bermuda debt had been partly cleared with the help of Lord Lansdowne (whom Moore repaid almost immediately by a draft on Longman, his publisher), the family, after more than a year, returned to Sloperton Cottage.

Political and historical writing

Squib writer for the Whigs

To support his family Moore entered the field of political squib writing on behalf of his Whig friends and patrons. The Whigs had been split by the divided response of Edmund Burke and Charles Fox to the French Revolution. But with antics of the Prince Regent, and in particular his highly public efforts to disgrace and divorce Princess Caroline, proving a lightening for popular discontent, they were finding new unity and purpose.

From the "Whigs as Whigs", Moore claimed not to have received "even the semblance of a favour" (Lord Moira, they "hardly acknowledge as one of themselves"). And with exceptions "easily counted", Moore was convinced that there was "just as much selfishness and as much low-party spirit among them generally as the Tories".[28] But for Moore, the fact that the Prince Regent held fast against Catholic admission to parliament may have been reason sufficient to turn on his former friend and patron. Moore's Horatian mockery of the Prince in the pages of The Morning Chronicle were collected in Intercepted Letters, or the Two-Penny Post-Bag (1813).

The lampooning of Castlereagh

 
Bloody Castlereagh, 1798

Another, and possibly more personal, target for Moore was the Foreign Secretary Lord Castlereagh. A reform-minded Ulster Presbyterian turned Anglican Tory, as Irish Secretary Castlereagh had been ruthless in the suppression of the United Irishmen and in pushing the Act of Union through the Irish Parliament. In what were the "verbal equivalents of the political cartoons of the day",[5] Tom Crib's Memorial to Congress (1818) and Fables for the Holy Alliance (1823), Moore lampoons Castlereagh's deference to the reactionary interests of Britain's continental allies.[29] Widely read, so that Moore eventually produced a sequel, was the verse novel The Fudge Family in Paris (1818). The family of an Irishman working as a propagandist for Castlereagh in Paris, the Fudges are accompanied by an accomplished tutor and classicist, Phelim Connor. An upright but disillusioned Irish Catholic, his letters to a friend reflect Moore's own views.

Connor's regular epistolary denunciations of Castlereagh have two recurrent themes. The first is Castlereagh as "the embodiment of the sickness with which Ireland had infected British politics as a consequence of the union":[30] "We sent thee Castlereagh – as heaps of dead Have slain their slayers by the pest they spread". The second is that at the time of the Acts of Union Castlereagh's support for Catholic emancipation had been disingenuous. Castlereagh had been master of "that faithless craft", which can "cart the slave, can swear he shall be freed", but then "basely spurns him" when his "point is gain'd".[31]

Through a mutual connection, Moore learned that Castlereagh had been particularly stung by the verses of the Tutor in the Fudge Family.[30] For openly casting the same dispersions against the former Chief Secretary—that he bloodied his hands in 1798 and deliberately deceived Catholics at the time of the Union—in 1811 the London-based Irish publisher, and former United Irishman, Peter Finnerty was sentenced to eighteen months for libel.[32]

The Memoirs of Captain Rock

 
"The Installation of Captain Rock", Daniel Maclise, 1834

As a partisan squib writer, Moore played a role not dissimilar to that of Jonathan Swift a century earlier. Moore greatly admired Swift as a satirist, but charged him with caring no more for the "misery" of his Roman Catholic countrymen "than his own Gulliver for the sufferings of so many disenfranchised Yahoos".[1][33] The Memoirs of Captain Rock might have been Moore's response to those who questioned whether the son of a Dublin grocer entertaining English audiences from Wiltshire was himself connected to the great mass of his countrymen – to those whose remitted rents helped sustain the great houses among which he was privileged to move.

The Memoirs relate the history of Ireland as told by a contemporary, the scion of a Catholic family that lost land in successive English settlements. The character, Captain Rock, is fictional but the history is in earnest. When it catches up with the narrator in the late Penal Law era, his family has been reduced to the "class of wretched cottiers". Exposed to the voracious demands of spendthrift Anglo-Irish landlords (pilloried by Maria Edgeworth), both father and son assume captaincies among the "White-boys, Oak-boys, and Hearts-of Steel", the tenant conspiracies that attack tax collectors, terrorise the landlords' agents and violently resist evictions.[34][1]

This low-level agrarian warfare continued through, and beyond, the Great Irish Famine of the 1840s. It was only after this catastrophe, which as Prime Minister Moore's Whig friend, Lord Russell, failed in any practical measure to allay,[35] that British governments began to assume responsibility for agrarian conditions. At the time of Captain Rock's publication (1824), the commanding issue of the day was not tenant rights or land reform. It was the final instalment of Catholic Emancipation: Castlereagh's unredeemed promise of Catholic admission to parliament.

Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin

 
"Terrors of Emancipation" – The Roman Catholic Relief Act, 1829

Since within a united kingdom Irish Catholics would be reduced to a distinct minority, Castlereagh's promises of their parliamentary emancipation seemed credible at the time of the Union. But the provision was stripped out of the union bills when in England the admission of Catholics to the "Protestant Constitution" encountered the standard objection: that as subject to political direction from Rome, Catholics could not be entrusted with the defence of constitutional liberties. Moore rallied to the "liberal compromise" proposed by Henry Grattan, who had moved the enfranchisement of Catholics in the old Irish parliament. Fears of "Popery" were to be allayed by according the Crown a "negative control", a veto, on the appointment of Catholic bishops.

In an open Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin (1810), Moore noted that the Irish bishops (legally resident in Ireland only from 1782) had themselves been willing to comply with a practice otherwise universal in Europe. Conceding a temporal check of papal authority, he argued, was in Ireland's Gallican tradition. In the time of "her native monarchy", the Pope had had no share in the election of Irish bishops. "Slavish notions of papal authority" developed only in consequence of the English conquest. The native aristocracy had sought in Rome a "spiritual alliance" against the new "temporal tyranny" at home.[36]

In resisting royal assent and in placing "their whole hierarchy at the disposal of the Roman court", Irish Catholics would "unnecessarily" be acting in "remembrance of times, which it is the interest of all parties [Catholic and Protestant, Irish and English] to forget". Such argument made little headway against the man Moore decried as a demagogue,[37] but who, as a result of his uncompromising stand, was to emerge as the undisputed leader of the Catholic interest in Ireland, Daniel O’Connell.

Even when, in 1814, the Curia itself (then still in silent alliance with Britain against Napoleon) proposed that bishops be "personally acceptable to the king", O'Connell was opposed. Better, he declared, that Irish Catholics "remain for ever without emancipation" rather than allow the king and his ministers "to interfere" with the Pope's appointment of Irish prelates. At stake was the unity of church and people. "Licensed" by the government, the bishops and their priests would be no more regarded than the ministers of the established Church of Ireland.[38]

When final emancipation came in 1829, the price O'Connell paid was the disenfranchisement of the Forty-shilling freeholders – those who, in the decisive protest against Catholics exclusion, defied their landlords in voting O'Connell in the 1828 Clare by-election. The "purity" of the Irish church was sustained. Moore lived to see the exceptional papal discretion thus confirmed reshaping the Irish hierarchy culminating in 1850 with the appointment of the Rector of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith in Rome, Paul Cullen, as Primate Archbishop of Armagh.

Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion

In a call heeded by Protestants of all denominations, in 1822 the new Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin, William Magee, declared the absolute necessity of winning an Irish majority for the Reformed faith — a "Second Reformation".[39] Carrying "religious tracts expressly written for the edification of the Irish peasantry", the "editor" of Captain Rock's Memoirs is an English missionary in the ensuing "bible war".[40] Catholics, who coalesced behind O'Connell in the Catholic Association, believed that proselytising advantage was being sought in hunger and distress (that tenancies and food were being used to secure converts), and that the usual political interests were at play.[41][42]

Moore's narrator in Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion (1833) is again fictional. He is, as Moore had been, a Catholic student at Trinity College. On news of Emancipation (passage of the 1829 Catholic Relief Bill) he exclaims: "Thank God! I may now, if I like, turn Protestant". Oppressed by the charge that Catholics are "a race of obstinate and obsolete religionists […] unfit for freedom", and freed from "the point of honour" that would have prevented him from abandoning his church in the face of continuing sanctions, he sets out to explore the tenets of the "true" religion.[43][44]

Predictably, the resolve the young man draws from his theological studies is to remain true to the faith of his forefathers (not to exchange "the golden armour of the old Catholic Saints" for "heretical brass").[45] The argument, however, was not the truth of Catholic doctrine. It was the inconsistency and fallacy of the bible preachers. Moore's purpose, he was later to write, was to put "upon record" the "disgust" he felt at "the arrogance with which most Protestant parsons assume […] credit for being the only true Christians, and the insolence with which […] they denounce all Catholics as idolators and Antichrist".[46] Had his young man found "among the Orthodox of the first [Christian] ages" one "particle" of their rejection of the supposed "corruptions" of the Roman church – justification not by faith alone but also by good works, transubstantiation, and veneration of saints, relics and images — he would have been persuaded.[45]

Brendan Clifford, editor of Moore's political writings, interprets Moore's philosophy as "cheerful paganism", or, at the very least, "à la carte Catholicism" favouring "what scriptural Protestantism hated: the music, the theatricality, the symbolism, the idolatry".[47] Despite his mother being a devout Catholic, and like O'Connell acknowledging Catholicism as Ireland's "national faith",[48] Moore appears to have abandoned the formal practice of his religion as soon as he entered Trinity.[15]

Sheridan, Fitzgerald and The History of Ireland

In 1825, Moore's Memoirs of the Life of Richard Brinsley Sheridan was finally published after nine years of work on and off. It proved popular, went through a number of editions, and helped establish Moore's reputation among literary critics. The work had a political aspect: Sheridan was not only a playwright, he was a Whig politician and a friend of Fox. Moore judged Sheridan an uncertain friend of reform. But he has Sheridan articulate in his own words a good part of what was to be the United Irish case for separation from England.

Writing in 1784 to his brother, Sheridan explains that the "subordinate situation [of Ireland] prevents the formation of any party among us, like those you have in England, composed of person acting upon certain principles, and pledged to support each other". Without the prospect of obtaining power – which in Ireland is "lodged in a branch of the English government" (the Dublin Castle executive) – there is little point in the members of parliament, no matter how personally disinterested, collaborating for any public purpose. Without an accountable executive the interests of the nation are systematically neglected.[49]

It is against this, the truncated state of politics in Ireland, that Moore sees Lord Edward Fitzgerald, a "Protestant reformer" who wished for "a democratic House of Commons and the Emancipation of his Catholic countrymen", driven toward the republican separatism of the United Irishmen.[50] He absolves Fitzgerald of recklessness: but for a contrary wind, decisive French assistance would have been delivered by General Hoche at Bantry in December 1796.[51] In his own Memoirs, Moore acknowledges his Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald (1831) as a "justification of the men of '98 – the ultimi Romanorum of our country".[46]

Moore's History of Ireland, published in four volumes between 1835 and 1846, reads as a further and extended indictment of English rule. It was an enormous work (consulted by Karl Marx in his extensive notes on Irish history),[52] but not a critical success. Moore acknowledged scholarly failings, some of which stemmed from his inability to read documentary sources in Irish.[15]

On Reform and Repeal

Parliamentary reform

In his journal, Moore confessed that he "agreed with the Tories in their opinion" as to the consequences of the first Parliamentary Reform Act (1832).[53] He believed it would give "an opening and impulse to the revolutionary feeling now abroad" [England, Moore suggested, had been "in the stream of a revolution for some years"][54] and that the "temporary satisfaction" it might produce would be but as the calm before a storm: "a downward reform (as Dryden says) rolls on fast".[55] But this was a prospect he embraced. In conversation with the Whig grandee Lord Lansdowne, he argued that while the consequences might be "disagreeable" for many of their friends, "We have now come to that point which all highly civilised countries reach when wealth and all the advantages that attend it are so unequally distributed that the whole is in an unnatural position: and nothing short of a general routing up can remedy the evil."[56]

Despite their initially greater opposition to reform, Moore predicted that the Tories would prove themselves better equipped to ride out this "general routing". With the young Benjamin Disraeli (who was to be author of the Second Reform Act in 1867) Moore agreed that since the Glorious Revolution first led them to court an alliance with the people against the aristocracy, the Tories had taken "a more democratic line". For Moore this was evidenced by the prime-ministerial careers of George Canning and Robert Peel: "mere commoners by birth could never have attained the same high station among the Whig party".[57]

O'Connell and Repeal

In 1832, Moore declined a voter petition from Limerick to stand for the Westminster Parliament as a Repeal candidate. When Daniel O'Connell took this as evidence of Moore's "lukewarmness in the cause of Ireland", Moore recalled O'Connell's praise for the "treasonous truths" of his book on Fitzgerald.[46] The difficulty, Moore suggested, was that these "truths" did not permit him to pretend with O'Connell that reversing the Acts of Union would amount to something less than real and lasting separation from Great Britain. Relations had been difficult enough after the old Irish Parliament had secured its legislative independence from London in 1782. But with a Catholic Parliament in Dublin, "which they would be sure to have out and out", the British government would be continually at odds, first over the disposal of Church of Ireland and absentee property, and then over what would be perennial issues of trade, foreign treaties and war.[58]

So "hopeless appeared the fate of Ireland under English government, whether of Whigs or Tories", that Moore declared himself willing to "run the risk of Repeal, even with separation as its too certain consequence."[58] But with Lord Fitzgerald, Moore believed independence possible only in union with the "Dissenters" (the Presbyterians) of the north (and possibly then, again only with a prospect of French intervention). To make "headway against England" the "feeling" of Catholics and Dissenters had first to be "nationalised". This is something Moore thought might be achieved by fixing upon the immediate abuses of the (Anglican and landed) "Irish establishment". As he had O'Connell's uncompromising stance on the Veto, Moore regarded O'Connell's campaign for Repeal as unhelpful or, at best, "premature".[59]

This perspective was shared by some of O'Connell's younger lieutenants, dissidents with the Repeal Association. Young Irelander Charles Gavan Duffy sought to build a "League of North and South"[60] around what Michael Davitt (of the later Land League) described as "the programme of the Whiteboys and Ribbonmen reduced to moral and constitutional standards"—tenant rights and land reform.[61]

Irish Melodies

Reception

In the early years of his career, Moore's work was largely generic, and had he died at this point he would likely not have been considered an Irish poet.[62] From 1806 to 1807, Moore dramatically changed his style of writing and focus. Following a request by the publishers James and William Power, he wrote lyrics to a series of Irish tunes in the manner of Haydn's settings of British folksongs, with Sir John Andrew Stevenson as arranger of the music. The principal source for the tunes was Edward Bunting's A General Collection of the Ancient Irish Music (1797) to which Moore had been introduced at Trinity by Edward Hudson.[63] The Melodies was published in ten volumes, together with a supplement, over 26 years between 1808 and 1834. The musical arrangements of the last volumes, following Stevenson's death in 1833, were by Henry Bishop.

The Melodies were an immediate success, "The Last Rose of Summer", "The Minstrel Boy", "Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms" and "Oft in the Stilly Night" becoming immensely popular. There were parodies in England, but translations into German, Italian, Hungarian, Czech, and French, and settings by Hector Berlioz guaranteed a large European audience. In the United States, "The Last Rose of Summer" alone sold more than a million copies.[64]

Byron said he knew them all "by rote and by heart"; setting them above epics and Moore above all other poets for his "peculiarity of talent, or rather talents, – poetry, music, voice, all his own". They were also praised by Sir Walter Scott who conceded that neither he nor Byron could attain Moore's power of adapting words to music.[5] Moore was in no doubt that the Irish Melodies would be "the only work of my pen […] whose fame (thanks to the sweet music in which it is embalmed) may boast a chance of prolonging its existence to a day much beyond our own".[15]

Ireland's "national music"

 
Moore's Melodies, Centenary Edition, 1880

The "ultra-Tory" The Anti-Jacobin Review ("Monthly Political and Literary Censor") [65] discerned in Moore's Melodies something more than innocuous drawing-room ballads: "several of them were composed in a very disordered state of society, if not in open rebellion. They are the melancholy ravings of the disappointed rebel, or his ill-educated offspring". Moore was providing texts to what he described as "our national music", and his lyrics did often "reflect an unmistakable intimation of dispossession and loss in the music itself".[15] Despite Moore's difficult relationship with O'Connell, in the early 1840s his Melodies were employed in the "Liberator's" renewed campaign for Repeal. The Repeal Association's monster meetings (crowds of over 100,000) were usually followed by public banquets. At Mallow, Co. Cork, before the dinner speeches, a singer performed Moore's "Where Is the Slave?":

Oh, where's the slave so lowly, Condemned to chains unholy, Who could be burst His bonds accursed, Would die beneath them slowly?

O'Connell leapt to his feet, threw his arms wide and cried "I am not that slave!" All the room followed: "We are not those slaves! We are not those slaves!"[66]

In the greatest meeting of all, at the Hill of Tara (by tradition the inaugural seat of the High Kings of Ireland), on the feast-day of the Assumption, 15 August 1843, O'Connell's carriage proceeded through a crowd, reportedly of a million, accompanied by a harpist playing Moore's "The Harp that once through Tara's Halls".[66]

Later criticism and reappraisal

Some critics detected a tone of national resignation and defeatism in Moore's lyrics: a "whining lamentation over our eternal fall, and miserable appeals to our masters to regard us with pity". William Hazlitt observed that "if Moore's Irish Melodies with their drawing-room, lackadaisical, patriotism were really the melodies of the Irish nation, the Irish people deserve to be slaves forever".[67] Moore, in Hazlitt's view had "convert[ed] the wild harp of Erin into a musical snuff box".[68] It was a judgement later generations of Irish writers appeared to share.[69]

In A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, as he passes "the droll statue of the national poet of Ireland" in College Green, James Joyce's biographic protagonist, Stephen Dedalus, remarks on the figure's "servile head". Yet in his father's house, Dedalus is moved when he hears his younger brothers and sisters singing Moore's "Oft in the Stilly Night". Despite Joyce's occasional expressions of disdain for the bard, critic Emer Nolan suggests that the writer responded to the "element of utopian longing as well as the sentimental nostalgia" in Moore's music. In Finnegans Wake, Joyce has occasion to allude to virtually every one of the Melodies.[69]

While acknowledging that his own sense of an Irish past was "woven . . . out of Moore's Melodies", in a 1979 tribute to Moore, Seamus Heaney remarked that Ireland had rescinded Moore's title of national bard because his characteristic tone was '"too light, too conciliatory, too colonisé" for a nation "whose conscience was being forged by James Joyce, whose tragic disunity was being envisaged by W.B. Yeats and whose literary tradition was being restored by the repossession of voices such as Aodhagán O Rathaille's or Brian Merriman's".[70][69]

More recently, there has been a reappraisal sympathetic to Moore's "strategies of disguise, concealment and historical displacement so necessary for an Irish Catholic patriot who regularly sang songs to London glitterati about Irish suffering and English 'bigotry and misrule'".[71] The political content of the Melodies and their connections to the United Irishmen and to the death of Emmet have been discussed in Ronan Kelly's biography of the poet, Bard of Erin (2008), by Mary Helen Thuente in The Harp Restrung: the United Irishmen and the Rise of Literary Nationalism (1994); and by Una Hunt in Literary Relationship of Lord Byron and Thomas Moore (2001).[71]

Eóin MacWhite[72] and Kathleen O'Donnell[73] have found that the political undertone of the Melodies and of other of Moore's works was readily appreciated by dissidents in the imperial realms of eastern Europe. Greek-Rumanian conspirators against the Sultan, Russian Decembrists and, above all, Polish intellectuals recognised in the Gothic elements of the Melodies, Lalla Rookh (“a dramatization of Irish patriotism in an Eastern parable”)[74] and Captain Rock (all of which found translators) "a cloak of culture and fraternity".[75]

Byron's Memoirs

 
Byron: "When you read my Memoirs you will learn the evils of true dissipation."[76]

Moore was much criticised by contemporaries for allowing himself to be persuaded, on the grounds of their indelicacy, to destroy Byron's Memoirs.[77] Modern scholarship assigns the blame elsewhere.

In 1821, with Byron's blessing, Moore sold the manuscript, with which Byron had entrusted him three years before, to the publisher John Murray. Although he himself allowed that it contained some "very coarse things",[76] when, following Bryon's death in 1824, Moore learned that Murray had deemed the material unfit for publication he spoke of settling the matter with a duel.[78] But the combination of Byron's wife Lady Byron, half-sister and executor Augusta Leigh and Moore's rival in Byron's friendship John Cam Hobhouse prevailed. In what some were to call the greatest literary crime in history, in Moore's presence the family solicitors tore up all extant copies of the manuscript and burned them in Murray's fireplace.[79][80]

With the assistance of papers provided by Mary Shelley, Moore retrieved what he could. His Letters and Journals of Lord Byron: With Notices of His Life (1830) "contrived", in the view of Macaulay, "to exhibit so much of the character and opinions of his friend, with so little pain to the feelings of the living".[15] Lady Byron still professed herself scandalised[5]—as did The Times.[81]

With Byron an inspiration, Moore previously published a collection of songs, Evenings in Greece, (1826) and, set in 3rd-century Egypt, his only prose novel The Epicurean (1827). Supplying a demand for "semi-erotic romance tinged with religiosity" it was a popular success.[82]

1844 photograph by Henry Fox Talbot

 
Moore stands centre in a photograph by William Henry Fox Talbot dated April 1844

In what may be the earliest known photograph of an Irishman, Moore stands in the centre of a calotype dated April 1844.

Moore is pictured with members of the household of William Henry Fox Talbot, the photographer. Talbot, a pioneer of photography (the inventor of the salted paper and calotype processes) was Moore's neighbour in Wiltshire. It is possible that the lady to the lower right of Moore is his wife Bessy Moore.[83]

To the left of Moore stands Henrietta Horatia Maria Fielding (1809–1851), a close friend of the Moores, Talbot's half sister[83] and the daughter of Rear-Admiral Charles Fielding.

Moore took an early interest in Talbot's photogenic drawings. Talbot, in turn, took images of Moore's hand-written poetry possibly for inclusion in facsimile in an edition of The Pencil of Nature,[84] the first commercially published book to be illustrated with photographs.[85]

Death

It is a criticism of Moore that he "wrote too much and catered too deliberately to his audiences".[5] In his lyrics there is a bathos that speaks both to a love of recitation and to an abiding sense of tragedy that is perhaps lost on the modern reader.

Oft, in the stilly night, Ere slumber's chain has bound me, Fond memory brings the light Of other days around me; The smiles, the tears, Of boyhood's years, The words of love then spoken; The eyes that shone, Now dimm'd and gone, The cheerful hearts now broken!...

When I remember all The friends, so link'd together, I’ve seen around me fall, Like leaves in wintry weather; I feel like one Who treads alone Some banquet-hall deserted, Whose lights are fled, Whose garlands dead, And all but he departed!...[86]

In the late 1840s (and as the catastrophe of the Great Famine overtook Ireland), Moore's powers began to fail. He was reduced ultimately to senility, which came suddenly in December 1849. Moore died on February 25, 1852, preceded by all his children and by most of his friends and companions.

After the deaths of his wife and five children, Moore died in his seventy-third year and was buried in Bromham churchyard within view of his cottage home, and beside his daughter Anastasia (who had died aged 17), near Devizes in Wiltshire.[87][88]

His epitaph at his St. Nicholas churchyard grave is inscribed:

Dear Harp of my Country! in darkness I found thee,

The cold chain of silence had hung o'er thee long,
When proudly, my own Island Harp, I unbound thee,

And gave all thy chords to light, freedom and song!

Moore had appointed as his literary executor, Lord John Russell, the Whig leader who, just four days before Moore's death, had ended his first term as Prime Minister. Russell dutifully published Moore's papers in accordance with his late friend's wishes. The Memoirs, Journal, and Correspondence of Thomas Moore appeared in eight volumes, published between 1853 and 1856.[89]


Commemoration

 
Statue of Moore in College Street, Dublin

Moore is often considered Ireland's national bard[90] and to be to Ireland what Robert Burns is to Scotland. Moore is commemorated in several places: by a plaque on the house where he was born, by busts at The Meetings and Central Park, New York, and by a bronze statue near Trinity College Dublin. There is a road in Walkinstown, Dublin, named Thomas Moore Road, in a series of roads named after famous composers, locally referred to as the Musical Roads.

In fiction

The character Tickle Tommy in John Paterson's Mare, James Hogg's allegorical satire on the Edinburgh publishing scene first published in the Newcastle Magazine in 1825, is based on Thomas Moore. Percy French wrote several parodic versions of Moore's melodies in a comic paper he edited for two years The Jarvey, including at least six versions of "The Minstrel Boy". are in The Jarvey. He also parodied Moore in his stage shows.[96] As noted above, Moore and his melodies also figure in the works of James Joyce: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Finnegan's Wake.[69]

List of works

Prose

Lyrics and verse

  • Odes of Anacreon (1800)
  • Poetical Works of the Late Thomas Little, Esq. (1801)
  • The Gypsy Prince (a comic opera, collaboration with Michael Kelly, 1801)
  • Epistles, Odes and Other Poems (1806)
  • A Selection of Irish Melodies, 1 and 2 (April 1808)
  • Corruption and Intolerance, Two Poems (1808)
  • The Sceptic: A Philosophical Satire (1809)
  • A Selection of Irish Melodies, 3 (Spring 1810)
  • A Melologue upon National Music (1811)
  • M.P., or The Blue Stocking, (a comic opera, collaboration with Charles Edward Horn, 1811)
  • A Selection of Irish Melodies, 4 (November 1811)
  • Parody of a Celebrated Letter (privately printed and circulated, February 1812, Examiner, 8 March 1812)
  • To a Plumassier (Morning Chronicle, 16 March 1812)
  • Extracts from the Diary of a Fashionable Politician (Morning Chronicle, 30 March 1812)
  • The Insurrection of the Papers (Morning Chronicle, 23 April 1812)
  • Lines on the Death of Mr. P[e]rc[e]v[a]l (May 1812)
  • The Sale of the Tools (Morning Chronicle, 21 December 1812)
  • Correspondence Between a Lady and a Gentleman (Morning Chronicle, 6 January 1813)
  • Intercepted Letters, or the Two-Penny Post-Bag (March 1813)
  • Reinforcements for Lord Wellington (Morning Chronicle, 27 August 1813)
  • A Selection of Irish Melodies, 5 (December 1813)
  • A Collection of the Vocal Music of Thomas Moore (1814)
  • A Selection of Irish Melodies, 6 (1815, April or after)
  • Sacred Songs, 1 (June 1816)
  • Lines on the Death of Sheridan (Morning Chronicle, 5 August 1816)
  • Lalla Rookh, an Oriental Romance (May 1817)
  • National Airs, 1 (23 April 1818)
  • To the Ship in which Lord C[A]ST[LE]R[EA]GH Sailed for the Continent (Morning Chronicle, 22 September 1818)
  • Lines on the Death of Joseph Atkinson, Esq. of Dublin (25 September 1818)
  • Go, Brothers in Wisdom (Morning Chronicle, 18 August 1818)
  • A Selection of Irish Melodies, 7 (1 October 1818)
  • To Sir Hudson Lowe (Examiner, 4 October 1818)
  • The Works of Thomas Moore (6 vols) (1819)
  • Tom Crib's Memorial to Congress (March 1819)
  • National Airs, 2 (1820)
  • Irish Melodies, with a Melologue upon National Music (1820)
  • A Selection of Irish Melodies, 8 (on or around 10 May 1821)
  • Irish Melodies (with an Appendix, containing the original advertisements and the prefatory letter on music, 1821)
  • National Airs, 3 (June 1822)
  • National Airs, 4 (1822)
  • The Loves of the Angels, a Poem (23 December 1822)
  • The Loves of the Angels, an Eastern Romance (5th ed. of Loves of the Angels) (1823)
  • Fables for the Holy Alliance, Rhymes on the Road, &c. &c. (7 May 1823)
  • Sacred Songs, 2 (1824)
  • A Selection of Irish Melodies, 9 (1 November 1824)
  • National Airs, 5 (1826)
  • Evenings in Greece, 1 (1826)
  • A Dream of Turtle (The Times, 28 September 1826)
  • A Set of Glees (circa 9 June 1827)
  • National Airs, 6 (1827)
  • Odes upon Cash, Corn, Catholics, and other Matters (October 1828)
  • Legendary Ballads (1830)
  • The Summer Fête. A Poem with Songs (December 1831)
  • Irish Antiquities (The Times, 5 March 1832)
  • From the Hon. Henry ---, to Lady Emma --- (The Times, 9 April 1832)
  • To Caroline, Viscountess Valletort (The Metropolitan Magazine, June 1832)
  • Ali's Bride... (The Metropolitan Magazine, August 1832)
  • Verses to the Poet Crabbe's Inkstand (The Metropolitan Magazine, August 1832)
  • Tory Pledges (The Times, 30 August 1832)
  • Song to the Departing Spirit of Tithe (The Metropolitan Magazine, September 1832)
  • The Duke is the Lad (The Times, 2 October 1832)
  • St. Jerome on Earth, First Visit (The Times, 29 October 1832)
  • St. Jerome on Earth, Second Visit (The Times, 12 November 1832)
  • Evenings in Greece, 2 (December 1832)
  • To the Rev. Charles Overton (The Times, 6 November 1833)
  • Irish Melodies, 10 (with Supplement) (1834)
  • Vocal Miscellany, 1 (1834)
  • The Numbering of the Clergy (Examiner, 5 October 1834)
  • Vocal Miscellany, 2 (1835)
  • The poetical works of Thomas Moore, complete in two volumes, Paris, Baudry's European library (rue du Coq, near the Louvre), 1835
  • The Song of the Box (Morning Chronicle, 19 February 1838)
  • Sketch of the First Act of a New Romantic Drama (Morning Chronicle, 22 March 1838)
  • Thoughts on Patrons, Puffs, and Other Matters (Bentley's Miscellany, 1839)
  • Alciphron, a Poem (1839)
  • The Poetical Works of Thomas Moore, collected by himself (10 vols) (1840–1841)
  • Thoughts on Mischief (Morning Chronicle, 2 May 1840)
  • Religion and Trade (Morning Chronicle, 1 June 1840)
  • An Account of an Extraordinary Dream (Morning Chronicle, 15 June 1840)
  • The Retreat of the Scorpion (Morning Chronicle, 16 July 1840)
  • Musings, suggested by the Late Promotion of Mrs. Nethercoat (Morning Chronicle, 27 August 1840)
  • The Triumphs of Farce (1840)
  • Latest Accounts from Olympus (1840)
  • A Threnody on the Approaching Demise of Old Mother Corn-Law (Morning Chronicle, 23 February 1842)
  • Sayings and Doings of Ancient Nicholas (Morning Chronicle, 7 April 1842)
  • ''More Sayings and Doings of Ancient Nicholas (Morning Chronicle, 12 May 1842)
  • Prose and verse, humorous, satirical and sentimental, by Thomas Moore, with suppressed passages from the memoirs of Lord Byron, chiefly from the author's manuscript and all hitherto inedited and uncollected. With notes and introduction by Richard Herne Shepherd (London: Chatto & Windus, Piccadilly, 1878).

References

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Bibliography

  • Benatti, Francesca, and Justin Tonra. "English Bards and Unknown Reviewers: A Stylometric Analysis of Thomas Moore and the Christabel Review", in: Breac: A Digital Journal of Irish Studies 3 (2015). URL.
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  • Dowden, Wilfred S. (ed.): The Letters of Thomas Moore, 2 vols, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1964).
  • Dowden, Wilfred S. (ed.): The Journal of Thomas Moore, 6 vols, (Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1983–91).
  • Gunning, John P.: Moore. Poet and Patriot (Dublin: M.H. Gill and Son, 1900).
  • Hunt, Una: Sources and Style in Moore's Irish Melodies (London: Routledge, 2017); ISBN 978-1-4094-0561-0 (hardback), ISBN 978-1-315-44300-3 (e-book).
  • Jones, Howard Mumford: The Harp that Once. Tom Moore and the Regency Period (New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1937).
  • Kelly, Ronan: Bard of Erin. The Life of Thomas Moore (Dublin: Penguin Ireland, 2008), ISBN 978-1-84488-143-7.
  • McCleave, Sarah / Caraher, Brian (eds): Thomas Moore and Romantic Inspiration. Poetry, Music, and Politics (New York: Routledge, 2018); ISBN 978-1-138-28147-9 (hardback), ISBN 978-1-315-27113-2 (e-book).
  • Ní Chinnéide, Veronica: "The Sources of Moore's Melodies", in: Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 89 (1959) 2, pp. 109–54.
  • Strong, L. A. G.: The Minstrel Boy. A Portrait of Tom Moore (London: Hodder & Stoughton, & New York: A. Knopf, 1937).
  • Tonra, Justin: "Masks of Refinement: Pseudonym, Paratext, and Authorship in the Early Poetry of Thomas Moore", in: European Romantic Review 25.5 (2014), pp. 551–73. doi:10.1080/10509585.2014.938231.
  • Tonra, Justin: "Pagan Angels and a Moral Law: Byron and Moore's Blasphemous Publications", in: European Romantic Review 28.6 (2017), pp. 789–811. doi:10.1080/10509585.2017.1388797.
  • Tonra, Justin: Write My Name: Authorship in the Poetry of Thomas Moore (New York; Abingdon: Routledge, 2020). doi:10.4324/9781003090960
  • Vail, Jeffery W.: The Literary Relationship of Lord Byron and Thomas Moore (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001).
  • Vail, Jeffery W.: "Thomas Moore in Ireland and America: The Growth of a Poet's Mind", in: Romanticism 10.1 (2004), pp. 41–62.
  • Vail, Jeffery W.: "Thomas Moore: After the Battle", in: Julia M. Wright (ed.), The Blackwell Companion to Irish Literature, 2 vols (New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010), vol. 1, pp. 310–25.
  • Vail, Jeffery W. (ed.): The Unpublished Letters of Thomas Moore, 2 vols (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2013), ISBN 978-1-84893-074-2.
  • Vail, Jeffery W.: "Thomas Moore", in: Gerald Dawe (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Irish Poets (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp. 61–73.
  • White, Harry: The Keeper's Recital. Music and Cultural History in Ireland 1770–1970 (Cork: Cork University Press, 1998), ISBN 1-85918-171-6.

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For the 16th century saint and philosopher see Thomas More For other people named Thomas Moore see Thomas Moore disambiguation Thomas Moore 28 May 1779 25 February 1852 was an Irish writer poet and lyricist celebrated for his Irish Melodies Their setting of English language verse to old Irish tunes marked the transition in popular Irish culture from Irish to English Politically Moore was recognised in England as a press or squib writer for the aristocratic Whigs in Ireland he was accounted a Catholic patriot Thomas MooreThomas Moore after a painting by Thomas LawrenceBorn 1779 05 28 28 May 1779Dublin IrelandDied25 February 1852 1852 02 25 aged 72 Sloperton Cottage Bromham Wiltshire EnglandOccupationWriter poet lyricistEducationSamuel Whyte s English Grammar School Dublin Trinity College Dublin Middle Temple LondonNotable worksIrish MelodiesMemoirs of Captain RockLalla RookhLetters amp Journals of Lord ByronSpouseElizabeth DykeMarried to a Protestant actress and hailed as Anacreon Moore after the classical Greek composer of drinking songs and erotic verse Moore did not profess religious piety Yet in the controversies that surrounded Catholic Emancipation Moore was seen to defend the tradition of the Church in Ireland against both evangelising Protestants and uncompromising lay Catholics Longer prose works reveal more radical sympathies The Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald depicts the United Irish leader as a martyr in the cause of democratic reform Complementing Maria Edgeworth s Castle Rackrent Memoirs of Captain Rock 1 is a saga not of Anglo Irish landowners but of their exhausted tenants driven to the semi insurrection of Whiteboyism Today Moore is remembered almost alone either for his Irish Melodies typically The Minstrel Boy and The Last Rose of Summer or less generously for the role he is thought to have played in the loss of the memoirs of his friend Lord Byron Contents 1 Early life and artistic launch 1 1 Trinity College and the United Irishmen 1 2 London society and first success 2 Travels and family 2 1 Observations of America and duel with critic 2 2 Marriage and children 2 3 Debt exile last meeting with Byron 3 Political and historical writing 3 1 Squib writer for the Whigs 3 2 The lampooning of Castlereagh 3 3 The Memoirs of Captain Rock 3 4 Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin 3 5 Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion 3 6 Sheridan Fitzgerald and The History of Ireland 4 On Reform and Repeal 4 1 Parliamentary reform 4 2 O Connell and Repeal 5 Irish Melodies 5 1 Reception 5 2 Ireland s national music 5 3 Later criticism and reappraisal 6 Byron s Memoirs 7 1844 photograph by Henry Fox Talbot 8 Death 9 Commemoration 10 In fiction 11 List of works 11 1 Prose 11 2 Lyrics and verse 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksEarly life and artistic launch EditThomas Moore was born to Anastasia Codd from Wexford and John Moore from Kerry over his parents grocery shop in Aungier Street Dublin 2 He had two younger sisters Kate and Ellen Moore showed an early interest in music and performance staging musical plays with his friends and entertaining hope of being an actor In Dublin he attended Samuel Whyte s co educational English grammar school 3 where he was schooled in Latin and Greek and became fluent in French and Italian By age fourteen he had had one of his poems published in a new literary magazine called the Anthologia Hibernica Irish Anthology 4 Samuel Whyte had taught Richard Brinsley Sheridan Irish playwright and English Whig politician of whom Moore later was to write a biography 5 Trinity College and the United Irishmen Edit In 1795 Moore was among the first Catholics admitted to Trinity College Dublin preparing as his mother had hoped for a career in law Through his friends at Trinity Robert Emmett and Edward Hudson Moore was connected to the popular politics of the capital agitated by the French Revolution and by the prospect of a French invasion With their encouragement in 1797 Moore wrote an appeal to his fellow students to resist the proposal then being canvassed by the English appointed Dublin Castle administration to secure Ireland by incorporating the kingdom in a union with Great Britain In April 1798 Moore was interrogated at Trinity but acquitted on the charge of being a party through the Society of United Irishmen to sedition 6 Moore had not taken the United Irish oath with Emmett and Hudson and he played no part in the republican rebellion of 1798 Moore was at home ill in bed 6 or in the conspiracy for which Emmett was executed in 1803 7 Later in a biography of the United Irish leader Lord Edward Fitzgerald 1831 8 he made clear his sympathies not hiding his regret that the French expedition under General Hoche failed in December 1796 to effect a landing 9 To Emmett s sacrifice on the gallows Moore pays homage in the song O Breathe Not His Name 1808 More veiled references to Emmet are found in the long oriental poem Lalla Rookh 1817 6 London society and first success Edit Moore as a young manIn 1799 Moore continued his law studies at Middle Temple in London The impecunious student was assisted by friends in the expatriate Irish community in London including Barbara widow of Arthur Chichester 1st Marquess of Donegall the landlord and borough owner of Belfast 10 Moore s translations of Anacreon celebrating wine women and song were published in 1800 with a dedication to the Prince of Wales His introduction to the future prince regent and King George IV was a high point in Moore s ingratiation with aristocratic and literary circles in London a success due in great degree to his talents as a singer and songwriter In the same year he collaborated briefly as a librettist with Michael Kelly in the comic opera The Gypsy Prince staged at the Theatre Royal Haymarket 11 In 1801 Moore hazarded a collection of his own verse Poetical Works of the Late Thomas Little Esq The pseudonym may have been advised by their juvenile eroticism Moore s celebration of kisses and embraces skirted contemporary standards of propriety When these tightened in the Victorian era they were to put an end to what was a relative publishing success 5 12 Travels and family EditObservations of America and duel with critic Edit In the hope of future advancement Moore reluctantly sailed from London in 1803 to take up a government post secured through the favours of Francis Rawdon Hastings 2nd Earl of Moira Lord Moira was a man distinct in his class for having on the eve of the rebellion in Ireland continued to protest government and loyalist outrages 13 and to have urged a policy of conciliation 14 Moore was to be the registrar of the Admiralty Prize Court in Bermuda Although as late as 1925 still recalled as the poet laureate of the island Moore found life on Bermuda sufficiently dull that after six months he appointed a deputy and left for an extended tour of North America 15 As in London Moore secured high society introductions in the United States including to the President Thomas Jefferson Repelled by the provincialism of the average American Moore consorted with exiled European aristocrats come to recover their fortunes and with oligarchic Federalists from whom he received what he later conceded was a twisted and tainted view of the new republic 5 Following his return to England in 1804 Moore published Epistles Odes and Other Poems 1806 In addition to complaints about America and Americans including their defence of slavery this catalogued Moore s real and imagined escapades with American women Francis Jeffrey denounced the volume in the Edinburgh Review July 1806 calling Moore the most licentious of modern versifiers a poet whose aim is to impose corruption upon his readers by concealing it under the mask of refinement 5 Moore challenged Jeffrey to a duel but their confrontation was interrupted by the police In what seemed to be a pattern in Moore s life it was possible to condemn Moore only if you did not know him the two then became fast friends 16 Moore nonetheless was dogged by the report that the police had found that the pistol given to Jeffrey was unloaded In his satirical English Bards and Scotch Reviewers 1809 Byron who had himself been stung by one of Jeffrey s reviews suggested Moore s weapon was also leadless on examination the balls of the pistols like the courage of the combatants were found to have evaporated To Moore this was scarcely more satisfactory and he wrote to Byron implying that unless the remarks were clarified Byron too would be challenged In the event when Byron who had been abroad returned there was again reconciliation and a lasting friendship 17 5 In 1809 Moore was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia 18 Marriage and children Edit Between 1808 and 1810 Moore appeared each year in Kilkenny Ireland with a charitable mixed repertory of professional players and high society amateurs He favoured comic roles in plays like Sheridan s The Rivals and O Keeffe s The Castle of Andalusia 19 Among the professionals on stage in Kilkenny with her sister the tragedienne to be Mary Ann Duff was Elizabeth Bessy Dyke 20 In 1811 Moore married Bessy in St Martin in the Fields London Together with Bessy s lack of a dowry the Protestant ceremony may have been the reason why Moore kept the match for some time secret from his parents Bessy shrank from fashionable society to such an extent that many of her husband s friends never met her some of them jokingly doubted her very existence Those who did held her in high regard 5 The couple first set up house in London then in the country at Kegworth Leicestershire 21 22 23 and in Lord Moira s neighbourhood at Mayfield Cottage in Staffordshire and finally in Sloperton Cottage in Wiltshire near the country seat of another close friend Henry Petty Fitzmaurice 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne Their company included Sheridan and John Philpot Curran both in their bitter final years 24 Tom and Bessy had five children none of whom survived them Three girls died young and both sons lost their lives as young men One of them Thomas Landsdowne Parr Moore as a lowly officer fought first with the British Army in Afghanistan and then with French Foreign Legion in Algeria He was dying of tuberculosis that riddled the family when according to Foreign Legion records he was killed in action on 6 February 1846 25 Despite these heavy personal losses the marriage of Thomas Moore is generally regarded to have been a happy one 5 Debt exile last meeting with Byron Edit In 1818 it was discovered that the man Moore had appointed his deputy in Bermuda had embezzled 6 000 pounds sterling a large sum for which Moore was liable To escape debtor s prison in September 1819 Moore left for France travelling with Lord John Russell future Whig prime minister and editor of Moore s journals and letters In Venice in October Moore saw Byron for the last time Byron entrusted him with a manuscript for his memoirs which as his literary executor Moore promised to have published after Byron s death 26 In Paris Moore was joined by Bessy and the children His social life was busy often involving meetings with Irish and British and travellers such as Maria Edgeworth and William Wordsworth But his attempt to bridge the gulf in his connections between his exiled fellow countrymen and members of the British establishment was not always successful In 1821 several emigres prominent among them Myles Byrne veteran of Vinegar Hill and of Napoleon s Irish Legion refused to attend a St Patrick s day dinner Moore had organised in Paris because of the presiding presence of Wellesley Pole Long a nephew of the Duke of Wellington 27 Once Moore learned the Bermuda debt had been partly cleared with the help of Lord Lansdowne whom Moore repaid almost immediately by a draft on Longman his publisher the family after more than a year returned to Sloperton Cottage Political and historical writing EditSquib writer for the Whigs Edit To support his family Moore entered the field of political squib writing on behalf of his Whig friends and patrons The Whigs had been split by the divided response of Edmund Burke and Charles Fox to the French Revolution But with antics of the Prince Regent and in particular his highly public efforts to disgrace and divorce Princess Caroline proving a lightening for popular discontent they were finding new unity and purpose From the Whigs as Whigs Moore claimed not to have received even the semblance of a favour Lord Moira they hardly acknowledge as one of themselves And with exceptions easily counted Moore was convinced that there was just as much selfishness and as much low party spirit among them generally as the Tories 28 But for Moore the fact that the Prince Regent held fast against Catholic admission to parliament may have been reason sufficient to turn on his former friend and patron Moore s Horatian mockery of the Prince in the pages of The Morning Chronicle were collected in Intercepted Letters or the Two Penny Post Bag 1813 The lampooning of Castlereagh Edit Bloody Castlereagh 1798Another and possibly more personal target for Moore was the Foreign Secretary Lord Castlereagh A reform minded Ulster Presbyterian turned Anglican Tory as Irish Secretary Castlereagh had been ruthless in the suppression of the United Irishmen and in pushing the Act of Union through the Irish Parliament In what were the verbal equivalents of the political cartoons of the day 5 Tom Crib s Memorial to Congress 1818 and Fables for the Holy Alliance 1823 Moore lampoons Castlereagh s deference to the reactionary interests of Britain s continental allies 29 Widely read so that Moore eventually produced a sequel was the verse novel The Fudge Family in Paris 1818 The family of an Irishman working as a propagandist for Castlereagh in Paris the Fudges are accompanied by an accomplished tutor and classicist Phelim Connor An upright but disillusioned Irish Catholic his letters to a friend reflect Moore s own views Connor s regular epistolary denunciations of Castlereagh have two recurrent themes The first is Castlereagh as the embodiment of the sickness with which Ireland had infected British politics as a consequence of the union 30 We sent thee Castlereagh as heaps of dead Have slain their slayers by the pest they spread The second is that at the time of the Acts of Union Castlereagh s support for Catholic emancipation had been disingenuous Castlereagh had been master of that faithless craft which can cart the slave can swear he shall be freed but then basely spurns him when his point is gain d 31 Through a mutual connection Moore learned that Castlereagh had been particularly stung by the verses of the Tutor in the Fudge Family 30 For openly casting the same dispersions against the former Chief Secretary that he bloodied his hands in 1798 and deliberately deceived Catholics at the time of the Union in 1811 the London based Irish publisher and former United Irishman Peter Finnerty was sentenced to eighteen months for libel 32 The Memoirs of Captain Rock Edit The Installation of Captain Rock Daniel Maclise 1834 As a partisan squib writer Moore played a role not dissimilar to that of Jonathan Swift a century earlier Moore greatly admired Swift as a satirist but charged him with caring no more for the misery of his Roman Catholic countrymen than his own Gulliver for the sufferings of so many disenfranchised Yahoos 1 33 The Memoirs of Captain Rock might have been Moore s response to those who questioned whether the son of a Dublin grocer entertaining English audiences from Wiltshire was himself connected to the great mass of his countrymen to those whose remitted rents helped sustain the great houses among which he was privileged to move The Memoirs relate the history of Ireland as told by a contemporary the scion of a Catholic family that lost land in successive English settlements The character Captain Rock is fictional but the history is in earnest When it catches up with the narrator in the late Penal Law era his family has been reduced to the class of wretched cottiers Exposed to the voracious demands of spendthrift Anglo Irish landlords pilloried by Maria Edgeworth both father and son assume captaincies among the White boys Oak boys and Hearts of Steel the tenant conspiracies that attack tax collectors terrorise the landlords agents and violently resist evictions 34 1 This low level agrarian warfare continued through and beyond the Great Irish Famine of the 1840s It was only after this catastrophe which as Prime Minister Moore s Whig friend Lord Russell failed in any practical measure to allay 35 that British governments began to assume responsibility for agrarian conditions At the time of Captain Rock s publication 1824 the commanding issue of the day was not tenant rights or land reform It was the final instalment of Catholic Emancipation Castlereagh s unredeemed promise of Catholic admission to parliament Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin Edit Terrors of Emancipation The Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829 Since within a united kingdom Irish Catholics would be reduced to a distinct minority Castlereagh s promises of their parliamentary emancipation seemed credible at the time of the Union But the provision was stripped out of the union bills when in England the admission of Catholics to the Protestant Constitution encountered the standard objection that as subject to political direction from Rome Catholics could not be entrusted with the defence of constitutional liberties Moore rallied to the liberal compromise proposed by Henry Grattan who had moved the enfranchisement of Catholics in the old Irish parliament Fears of Popery were to be allayed by according the Crown a negative control a veto on the appointment of Catholic bishops In an open Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin 1810 Moore noted that the Irish bishops legally resident in Ireland only from 1782 had themselves been willing to comply with a practice otherwise universal in Europe Conceding a temporal check of papal authority he argued was in Ireland s Gallican tradition In the time of her native monarchy the Pope had had no share in the election of Irish bishops Slavish notions of papal authority developed only in consequence of the English conquest The native aristocracy had sought in Rome a spiritual alliance against the new temporal tyranny at home 36 In resisting royal assent and in placing their whole hierarchy at the disposal of the Roman court Irish Catholics would unnecessarily be acting in remembrance of times which it is the interest of all parties Catholic and Protestant Irish and English to forget Such argument made little headway against the man Moore decried as a demagogue 37 but who as a result of his uncompromising stand was to emerge as the undisputed leader of the Catholic interest in Ireland Daniel O Connell Even when in 1814 the Curia itself then still in silent alliance with Britain against Napoleon proposed that bishops be personally acceptable to the king O Connell was opposed Better he declared that Irish Catholics remain for ever without emancipation rather than allow the king and his ministers to interfere with the Pope s appointment of Irish prelates At stake was the unity of church and people Licensed by the government the bishops and their priests would be no more regarded than the ministers of the established Church of Ireland 38 When final emancipation came in 1829 the price O Connell paid was the disenfranchisement of the Forty shilling freeholders those who in the decisive protest against Catholics exclusion defied their landlords in voting O Connell in the 1828 Clare by election The purity of the Irish church was sustained Moore lived to see the exceptional papal discretion thus confirmed reshaping the Irish hierarchy culminating in 1850 with the appointment of the Rector of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith in Rome Paul Cullen as Primate Archbishop of Armagh Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion Edit In a call heeded by Protestants of all denominations in 1822 the new Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin William Magee declared the absolute necessity of winning an Irish majority for the Reformed faith a Second Reformation 39 Carrying religious tracts expressly written for the edification of the Irish peasantry the editor of Captain Rock s Memoirs is an English missionary in the ensuing bible war 40 Catholics who coalesced behind O Connell in the Catholic Association believed that proselytising advantage was being sought in hunger and distress that tenancies and food were being used to secure converts and that the usual political interests were at play 41 42 Moore s narrator in Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion 1833 is again fictional He is as Moore had been a Catholic student at Trinity College On news of Emancipation passage of the 1829 Catholic Relief Bill he exclaims Thank God I may now if I like turn Protestant Oppressed by the charge that Catholics are a race of obstinate and obsolete religionists unfit for freedom and freed from the point of honour that would have prevented him from abandoning his church in the face of continuing sanctions he sets out to explore the tenets of the true religion 43 44 Predictably the resolve the young man draws from his theological studies is to remain true to the faith of his forefathers not to exchange the golden armour of the old Catholic Saints for heretical brass 45 The argument however was not the truth of Catholic doctrine It was the inconsistency and fallacy of the bible preachers Moore s purpose he was later to write was to put upon record the disgust he felt at the arrogance with which most Protestant parsons assume credit for being the only true Christians and the insolence with which they denounce all Catholics as idolators and Antichrist 46 Had his young man found among the Orthodox of the first Christian ages one particle of their rejection of the supposed corruptions of the Roman church justification not by faith alone but also by good works transubstantiation and veneration of saints relics and images he would have been persuaded 45 Brendan Clifford editor of Moore s political writings interprets Moore s philosophy as cheerful paganism or at the very least a la carte Catholicism favouring what scriptural Protestantism hated the music the theatricality the symbolism the idolatry 47 Despite his mother being a devout Catholic and like O Connell acknowledging Catholicism as Ireland s national faith 48 Moore appears to have abandoned the formal practice of his religion as soon as he entered Trinity 15 Sheridan Fitzgerald and The History of Ireland Edit In 1825 Moore s Memoirs of the Life of Richard Brinsley Sheridan was finally published after nine years of work on and off It proved popular went through a number of editions and helped establish Moore s reputation among literary critics The work had a political aspect Sheridan was not only a playwright he was a Whig politician and a friend of Fox Moore judged Sheridan an uncertain friend of reform But he has Sheridan articulate in his own words a good part of what was to be the United Irish case for separation from England Writing in 1784 to his brother Sheridan explains that the subordinate situation of Ireland prevents the formation of any party among us like those you have in England composed of person acting upon certain principles and pledged to support each other Without the prospect of obtaining power which in Ireland is lodged in a branch of the English government the Dublin Castle executive there is little point in the members of parliament no matter how personally disinterested collaborating for any public purpose Without an accountable executive the interests of the nation are systematically neglected 49 It is against this the truncated state of politics in Ireland that Moore sees Lord Edward Fitzgerald a Protestant reformer who wished for a democratic House of Commons and the Emancipation of his Catholic countrymen driven toward the republican separatism of the United Irishmen 50 He absolves Fitzgerald of recklessness but for a contrary wind decisive French assistance would have been delivered by General Hoche at Bantry in December 1796 51 In his own Memoirs Moore acknowledges his Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald 1831 as a justification of the men of 98 the ultimi Romanorum of our country 46 Moore s History of Ireland published in four volumes between 1835 and 1846 reads as a further and extended indictment of English rule It was an enormous work consulted by Karl Marx in his extensive notes on Irish history 52 but not a critical success Moore acknowledged scholarly failings some of which stemmed from his inability to read documentary sources in Irish 15 On Reform and Repeal EditParliamentary reform Edit In his journal Moore confessed that he agreed with the Tories in their opinion as to the consequences of the first Parliamentary Reform Act 1832 53 He believed it would give an opening and impulse to the revolutionary feeling now abroad England Moore suggested had been in the stream of a revolution for some years 54 and that the temporary satisfaction it might produce would be but as the calm before a storm a downward reform as Dryden says rolls on fast 55 But this was a prospect he embraced In conversation with the Whig grandee Lord Lansdowne he argued that while the consequences might be disagreeable for many of their friends We have now come to that point which all highly civilised countries reach when wealth and all the advantages that attend it are so unequally distributed that the whole is in an unnatural position and nothing short of a general routing up can remedy the evil 56 Despite their initially greater opposition to reform Moore predicted that the Tories would prove themselves better equipped to ride out this general routing With the young Benjamin Disraeli who was to be author of the Second Reform Act in 1867 Moore agreed that since the Glorious Revolution first led them to court an alliance with the people against the aristocracy the Tories had taken a more democratic line For Moore this was evidenced by the prime ministerial careers of George Canning and Robert Peel mere commoners by birth could never have attained the same high station among the Whig party 57 O Connell and Repeal Edit In 1832 Moore declined a voter petition from Limerick to stand for the Westminster Parliament as a Repeal candidate When Daniel O Connell took this as evidence of Moore s lukewarmness in the cause of Ireland Moore recalled O Connell s praise for the treasonous truths of his book on Fitzgerald 46 The difficulty Moore suggested was that these truths did not permit him to pretend with O Connell that reversing the Acts of Union would amount to something less than real and lasting separation from Great Britain Relations had been difficult enough after the old Irish Parliament had secured its legislative independence from London in 1782 But with a Catholic Parliament in Dublin which they would be sure to have out and out the British government would be continually at odds first over the disposal of Church of Ireland and absentee property and then over what would be perennial issues of trade foreign treaties and war 58 So hopeless appeared the fate of Ireland under English government whether of Whigs or Tories that Moore declared himself willing to run the risk of Repeal even with separation as its too certain consequence 58 But with Lord Fitzgerald Moore believed independence possible only in union with the Dissenters the Presbyterians of the north and possibly then again only with a prospect of French intervention To make headway against England the feeling of Catholics and Dissenters had first to be nationalised This is something Moore thought might be achieved by fixing upon the immediate abuses of the Anglican and landed Irish establishment As he had O Connell s uncompromising stance on the Veto Moore regarded O Connell s campaign for Repeal as unhelpful or at best premature 59 This perspective was shared by some of O Connell s younger lieutenants dissidents with the Repeal Association Young Irelander Charles Gavan Duffy sought to build a League of North and South 60 around what Michael Davitt of the later Land League described as the programme of the Whiteboys and Ribbonmen reduced to moral and constitutional standards tenant rights and land reform 61 Irish Melodies EditReception Edit The Last Rose of Summer source source track sung by Adelina Patti in 1906 Problems playing this file See media help In the early years of his career Moore s work was largely generic and had he died at this point he would likely not have been considered an Irish poet 62 From 1806 to 1807 Moore dramatically changed his style of writing and focus Following a request by the publishers James and William Power he wrote lyrics to a series of Irish tunes in the manner of Haydn s settings of British folksongs with Sir John Andrew Stevenson as arranger of the music The principal source for the tunes was Edward Bunting s A General Collection of the Ancient Irish Music 1797 to which Moore had been introduced at Trinity by Edward Hudson 63 The Melodies was published in ten volumes together with a supplement over 26 years between 1808 and 1834 The musical arrangements of the last volumes following Stevenson s death in 1833 were by Henry Bishop The Melodies were an immediate success The Last Rose of Summer The Minstrel Boy Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms and Oft in the Stilly Night becoming immensely popular There were parodies in England but translations into German Italian Hungarian Czech and French and settings by Hector Berlioz guaranteed a large European audience In the United States The Last Rose of Summer alone sold more than a million copies 64 Byron said he knew them all by rote and by heart setting them above epics and Moore above all other poets for his peculiarity of talent or rather talents poetry music voice all his own They were also praised by Sir Walter Scott who conceded that neither he nor Byron could attain Moore s power of adapting words to music 5 Moore was in no doubt that the Irish Melodies would be the only work of my pen whose fame thanks to the sweet music in which it is embalmed may boast a chance of prolonging its existence to a day much beyond our own 15 Ireland s national music Edit Moore s Melodies Centenary Edition 1880The ultra Tory The Anti Jacobin Review Monthly Political and Literary Censor 65 discerned in Moore s Melodies something more than innocuous drawing room ballads several of them were composed in a very disordered state of society if not in open rebellion They are the melancholy ravings of the disappointed rebel or his ill educated offspring Moore was providing texts to what he described as our national music and his lyrics did often reflect an unmistakable intimation of dispossession and loss in the music itself 15 Despite Moore s difficult relationship with O Connell in the early 1840s his Melodies were employed in the Liberator s renewed campaign for Repeal The Repeal Association s monster meetings crowds of over 100 000 were usually followed by public banquets At Mallow Co Cork before the dinner speeches a singer performed Moore s Where Is the Slave Oh where s the slave so lowly Condemned to chains unholy Who could be burst His bonds accursed Would die beneath them slowly O Connell leapt to his feet threw his arms wide and cried I am not that slave All the room followed We are not those slaves We are not those slaves 66 In the greatest meeting of all at the Hill of Tara by tradition the inaugural seat of the High Kings of Ireland on the feast day of the Assumption 15 August 1843 O Connell s carriage proceeded through a crowd reportedly of a million accompanied by a harpist playing Moore s The Harp that once through Tara s Halls 66 Later criticism and reappraisal Edit Some critics detected a tone of national resignation and defeatism in Moore s lyrics a whining lamentation over our eternal fall and miserable appeals to our masters to regard us with pity William Hazlitt observed that if Moore s Irish Melodies with their drawing room lackadaisical patriotism were really the melodies of the Irish nation the Irish people deserve to be slaves forever 67 Moore in Hazlitt s view had convert ed the wild harp of Erin into a musical snuff box 68 It was a judgement later generations of Irish writers appeared to share 69 In A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man as he passes the droll statue of the national poet of Ireland in College Green James Joyce s biographic protagonist Stephen Dedalus remarks on the figure s servile head Yet in his father s house Dedalus is moved when he hears his younger brothers and sisters singing Moore s Oft in the Stilly Night Despite Joyce s occasional expressions of disdain for the bard critic Emer Nolan suggests that the writer responded to the element of utopian longing as well as the sentimental nostalgia in Moore s music In Finnegans Wake Joyce has occasion to allude to virtually every one of the Melodies 69 While acknowledging that his own sense of an Irish past was woven out of Moore s Melodies in a 1979 tribute to Moore Seamus Heaney remarked that Ireland had rescinded Moore s title of national bard because his characteristic tone was too light too conciliatory too colonise for a nation whose conscience was being forged by James Joyce whose tragic disunity was being envisaged by W B Yeats and whose literary tradition was being restored by the repossession of voices such as Aodhagan O Rathaille s or Brian Merriman s 70 69 More recently there has been a reappraisal sympathetic to Moore s strategies of disguise concealment and historical displacement so necessary for an Irish Catholic patriot who regularly sang songs to London glitterati about Irish suffering and English bigotry and misrule 71 The political content of the Melodies and their connections to the United Irishmen and to the death of Emmet have been discussed in Ronan Kelly s biography of the poet Bard of Erin 2008 by Mary Helen Thuente in The Harp Restrung the United Irishmen and the Rise of Literary Nationalism 1994 and by Una Hunt in Literary Relationship of Lord Byron and Thomas Moore 2001 71 Eoin MacWhite 72 and Kathleen O Donnell 73 have found that the political undertone of the Melodies and of other of Moore s works was readily appreciated by dissidents in the imperial realms of eastern Europe Greek Rumanian conspirators against the Sultan Russian Decembrists and above all Polish intellectuals recognised in the Gothic elements of the Melodies Lalla Rookh a dramatization of Irish patriotism in an Eastern parable 74 and Captain Rock all of which found translators a cloak of culture and fraternity 75 Byron s Memoirs Edit Byron When you read my Memoirs you will learn the evils of true dissipation 76 Moore was much criticised by contemporaries for allowing himself to be persuaded on the grounds of their indelicacy to destroy Byron s Memoirs 77 Modern scholarship assigns the blame elsewhere In 1821 with Byron s blessing Moore sold the manuscript with which Byron had entrusted him three years before to the publisher John Murray Although he himself allowed that it contained some very coarse things 76 when following Bryon s death in 1824 Moore learned that Murray had deemed the material unfit for publication he spoke of settling the matter with a duel 78 But the combination of Byron s wife Lady Byron half sister and executor Augusta Leigh and Moore s rival in Byron s friendship John Cam Hobhouse prevailed In what some were to call the greatest literary crime in history in Moore s presence the family solicitors tore up all extant copies of the manuscript and burned them in Murray s fireplace 79 80 With the assistance of papers provided by Mary Shelley Moore retrieved what he could His Letters and Journals of Lord Byron With Notices of His Life 1830 contrived in the view of Macaulay to exhibit so much of the character and opinions of his friend with so little pain to the feelings of the living 15 Lady Byron still professed herself scandalised 5 as did The Times 81 With Byron an inspiration Moore previously published a collection of songs Evenings in Greece 1826 and set in 3rd century Egypt his only prose novel The Epicurean 1827 Supplying a demand for semi erotic romance tinged with religiosity it was a popular success 82 1844 photograph by Henry Fox Talbot Edit Moore stands centre in a photograph by William Henry Fox Talbot dated April 1844 In what may be the earliest known photograph of an Irishman Moore stands in the centre of a calotype dated April 1844 Moore is pictured with members of the household of William Henry Fox Talbot the photographer Talbot a pioneer of photography the inventor of the salted paper and calotype processes was Moore s neighbour in Wiltshire It is possible that the lady to the lower right of Moore is his wife Bessy Moore 83 To the left of Moore stands Henrietta Horatia Maria Fielding 1809 1851 a close friend of the Moores Talbot s half sister 83 and the daughter of Rear Admiral Charles Fielding Moore took an early interest in Talbot s photogenic drawings Talbot in turn took images of Moore s hand written poetry possibly for inclusion in facsimile in an edition of The Pencil of Nature 84 the first commercially published book to be illustrated with photographs 85 Death EditIt is a criticism of Moore that he wrote too much and catered too deliberately to his audiences 5 In his lyrics there is a bathos that speaks both to a love of recitation and to an abiding sense of tragedy that is perhaps lost on the modern reader Oft in the stilly night Ere slumber s chain has bound me Fond memory brings the light Of other days around me The smiles the tears Of boyhood s years The words of love then spoken The eyes that shone Now dimm d and gone The cheerful hearts now broken When I remember all The friends so link d together I ve seen around me fall Like leaves in wintry weather I feel like one Who treads alone Some banquet hall deserted Whose lights are fled Whose garlands dead And all but he departed 86 Window at Ottawa Public Library features Moore with Dickens Archibald Lampman Duncan Campbell Scott Byron Tennyson and Shakespeare In the late 1840s and as the catastrophe of the Great Famine overtook Ireland Moore s powers began to fail He was reduced ultimately to senility which came suddenly in December 1849 Moore died on February 25 1852 preceded by all his children and by most of his friends and companions After the deaths of his wife and five children Moore died in his seventy third year and was buried in Bromham churchyard within view of his cottage home and beside his daughter Anastasia who had died aged 17 near Devizes in Wiltshire 87 88 His epitaph at his St Nicholas churchyard grave is inscribed Dear Harp of my Country in darkness I found thee The cold chain of silence had hung o er thee long When proudly my own Island Harp I unbound thee And gave all thy chords to light freedom and song Moore had appointed as his literary executor Lord John Russell the Whig leader who just four days before Moore s death had ended his first term as Prime Minister Russell dutifully published Moore s papers in accordance with his late friend s wishes The Memoirs Journal and Correspondence of Thomas Moore appeared in eight volumes published between 1853 and 1856 89 Commemoration Edit Statue of Moore in College Street Dublin Moore is often considered Ireland s national bard 90 and to be to Ireland what Robert Burns is to Scotland Moore is commemorated in several places by a plaque on the house where he was born by busts at The Meetings and Central Park New York and by a bronze statue near Trinity College Dublin There is a road in Walkinstown Dublin named Thomas Moore Road in a series of roads named after famous composers locally referred to as the Musical Roads Many composers have set the poems of Thomas Moore to music They include Ludwig van Beethoven Gaspare Spontini Robert Schumann Felix Mendelssohn Hector Berlioz Charles Ives William Bolcom Lori Laitman Benjamin Britten and Henri Duparc Many songs of Thomas Moore are cited in works of James Joyce for example Silent O Moyle in Two Gallants Dubliners 91 or The Last Rose of Summer Oliver Onions quotes Moore s poem Oft in the Stilly Night in his 1910 ghost story The Cigarette Case 92 It is also referenced in Bob Shaw s 1966 science fiction story Light of Other Days The earliest known photograph taken by a woman Constance Fox Talbot is an albeit somewhat unclear image of a few lines from one of his poems 93 Letitia Elizabeth Landon offers a tribute in her poem Thomas Moore Esq in Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1839 94 Wikisource has original text related to this article Thomas Moore Esq a poetical illustration byL E L to a portrait byF Sieurec Edna O Brien wrote a short story entitled Oft in the Stilly Night in her 1990 story collection Lantern Slides 95 In fiction EditThe character Tickle Tommy in John Paterson s Mare James Hogg s allegorical satire on the Edinburgh publishing scene first published in the Newcastle Magazine in 1825 is based on Thomas Moore Percy French wrote several parodic versions of Moore s melodies in a comic paper he edited for two years The Jarvey including at least six versions of The Minstrel Boy are in The Jarvey He also parodied Moore in his stage shows 96 As noted above Moore and his melodies also figure in the works of James Joyce A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Finnegan s Wake 69 List of works Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Author Thomas Moore 1779 1852 Prose Edit A Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin 1810 The Fudge Family in Paris 1818 Memoirs of Captain Rock 1824 Memoirs of the Life of Richard Brinsley Sheridan 2 vols 1825 The Epicurean a Tale 29 June 1827 Letters amp Journals of Lord Byron with Notices of his Life 2 vols 1830 1831 Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald 1831 Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion 2 vols 1833 The Fudge Family in England 1835 The History of Ireland vol 1 1835 The History of Ireland vol 2 1837 The History of Ireland vol 3 1840 The History of Ireland vol 4 1846 Lyrics and verse Edit Odes of Anacreon 1800 Poetical Works of the Late Thomas Little Esq 1801 The Gypsy Prince a comic opera collaboration with Michael Kelly 1801 Epistles Odes and Other Poems 1806 A Selection of Irish Melodies 1 and 2 April 1808 Corruption and Intolerance Two Poems 1808 The Sceptic A Philosophical Satire 1809 A Selection of Irish Melodies 3 Spring 1810 A Melologue upon National Music 1811 M P or The Blue Stocking a comic opera collaboration with Charles Edward Horn 1811 A Selection of Irish Melodies 4 November 1811 Parody of a Celebrated Letter privately printed and circulated February 1812 Examiner 8 March 1812 To a Plumassier Morning Chronicle 16 March 1812 Extracts from the Diary of a Fashionable Politician Morning Chronicle 30 March 1812 The Insurrection of the Papers Morning Chronicle 23 April 1812 Lines on the Death of Mr P e rc e v a l May 1812 The Sale of the Tools Morning Chronicle 21 December 1812 Correspondence Between a Lady and a Gentleman Morning Chronicle 6 January 1813 Intercepted Letters or the Two Penny Post Bag March 1813 Reinforcements for Lord Wellington Morning Chronicle 27 August 1813 A Selection of Irish Melodies 5 December 1813 A Collection of the Vocal Music of Thomas Moore 1814 A Selection of Irish Melodies 6 1815 April or after Sacred Songs 1 June 1816 Lines on the Death of Sheridan Morning Chronicle 5 August 1816 Lalla Rookh an Oriental Romance May 1817 National Airs 1 23 April 1818 To the Ship in which Lord C A ST LE R EA GH Sailed for the Continent Morning Chronicle 22 September 1818 Lines on the Death of Joseph Atkinson Esq of Dublin 25 September 1818 Go Brothers in Wisdom Morning Chronicle 18 August 1818 A Selection of Irish Melodies 7 1 October 1818 To Sir Hudson Lowe Examiner 4 October 1818 The Works of Thomas Moore 6 vols 1819 Tom Crib s Memorial to Congress March 1819 National Airs 2 1820 Irish Melodies with a Melologue upon National Music 1820 A Selection of Irish Melodies 8 on or around 10 May 1821 Irish Melodies with an Appendix containing the original advertisements and the prefatory letter on music 1821 National Airs 3 June 1822 National Airs 4 1822 The Loves of the Angels a Poem 23 December 1822 The Loves of the Angels an Eastern Romance 5th ed of Loves of the Angels 1823 Fables for the Holy Alliance Rhymes on the Road amp c amp c 7 May 1823 Sacred Songs 2 1824 A Selection of Irish Melodies 9 1 November 1824 National Airs 5 1826 Evenings in Greece 1 1826 A Dream of Turtle The Times 28 September 1826 A Set of Glees circa 9 June 1827 National Airs 6 1827 Odes upon Cash Corn Catholics and other Matters October 1828 Legendary Ballads 1830 The Summer Fete A Poem with Songs December 1831 Irish Antiquities The Times 5 March 1832 From the Hon Henry to Lady Emma The Times 9 April 1832 To Caroline Viscountess Valletort The Metropolitan Magazine June 1832 Ali s Bride The Metropolitan Magazine August 1832 Verses to the Poet Crabbe s Inkstand The Metropolitan Magazine August 1832 Tory Pledges The Times 30 August 1832 Song to the Departing Spirit of Tithe The Metropolitan Magazine September 1832 The Duke is the Lad The Times 2 October 1832 St Jerome on Earth First Visit The Times 29 October 1832 St Jerome on Earth Second Visit The Times 12 November 1832 Evenings in Greece 2 December 1832 To the Rev Charles Overton The Times 6 November 1833 Irish Melodies 10 with Supplement 1834 Vocal Miscellany 1 1834 The Numbering of the Clergy Examiner 5 October 1834 Vocal Miscellany 2 1835 The poetical works of Thomas Moore complete in two volumes Paris Baudry s European library rue du Coq near the Louvre 1835 The Song of the Box Morning Chronicle 19 February 1838 Sketch of the First Act of a New Romantic Drama Morning Chronicle 22 March 1838 Thoughts on Patrons Puffs and Other Matters Bentley s Miscellany 1839 Alciphron a Poem 1839 The Poetical Works of Thomas Moore collected by himself 10 vols 1840 1841 Thoughts on Mischief Morning Chronicle 2 May 1840 Religion and Trade Morning Chronicle 1 June 1840 An Account of an Extraordinary Dream Morning Chronicle 15 June 1840 The Retreat of the Scorpion Morning Chronicle 16 July 1840 Musings suggested by the Late Promotion of Mrs Nethercoat Morning Chronicle 27 August 1840 The Triumphs of Farce 1840 Latest Accounts from Olympus 1840 A Threnody on the Approaching Demise of Old Mother Corn Law Morning Chronicle 23 February 1842 Sayings and Doings of Ancient Nicholas Morning Chronicle 7 April 1842 More Sayings and Doings of Ancient Nicholas Morning Chronicle 12 May 1842 Prose and verse humorous satirical and sentimental by Thomas Moore with suppressed passages from the memoirs of Lord Byron chiefly from the author s manuscript and all hitherto inedited and uncollected With notes and introduction by Richard Herne Shepherd London Chatto amp Windus Piccadilly 1878 References Edit a b c Moore Thomas 1835 Memoirs of Captain Rock Paris Baudry s European Library Retrieved 20 August 2020 I Hear America Singing Archived 20 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Geohegan Patrick 2009 Whyte Samuel Dictionary of Irish Biography www dib ie Retrieved 1 February 2022 Thomas Moore Critical Essays eNotes com eNotes Retrieved 11 April 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k Thomas Moore poetryfoundation org Poetry Foundation Retrieved 10 August 2020 a b c Kelly Ronan 22 February 2013 Another side of Thomas Moore History Ireland Retrieved 31 July 2022 Anon March 1853 Lord John Russell s Memoirs of Moore in Dublin Review vol 34 p 123 Moore Thomas 1831 The Life and Death of Edward Fitzgerald Volume 1 London Longman Reese Orme Brown amp Green Moore Thomas 1993 Political and Historical Writings on Irish and British Affairs by Thomas Moore Introduced by Brendan Clifford Belfast Athol Books pp 132 152 153 ISBN 0 85034 067 5 Anon 1853 p 126 Eric Walter White A Register of First Performances of English Operas London The Society for Theatre Research 1983 ISBN 0 85430 036 8 p 59 Brendan Clifford introduction to Political and Historical Writings on Irish and British Affairs by Thomas Moore p 14 Curtin Nancy 1998 The United Irishmen Popular Politics in Ulster and Dublin 1791 1798 Oxford Oxford University Press p 217 ISBN 978 0 19 820736 8 Dickson Charles 1997 Revolt in the North Antrim and Down in 1798 London Constable ISBN 0094772606 p 103 a b c d e f White Harry Moore Thomas Dictionary of Irish Biography Royal Irish Academy Retrieved 18 August 2020 Clifford introduction Political and Historical Writings by Thomas Moore p 14 Kelly Ronan 2008 Bard of Erin The Life of Thomas Moore Dublin Penguin Ireland pp 139 147 182 184 204 209 ISBN 978 1 84488 143 7 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2 April 2021 Kelly p 170 175 Joseph Norton Ireland Mrs Duff Boston James R Osgood and Co 1882 Thomas Moore 1779 1852 Retrieved 20 November 2020 Bloy Marjorie Biography Thomas Moore 1779 1852 A Web of English History Retrieved 20 November 2020 House historian Vicars framework knitters and a poet Country Life date 2 December 2011 2 December 2011 Retrieved 20 November 2020 Webb Alfred 1878 John Philpot Curran Irish Biography www libraryireland com Retrieved 9 February 2023 Ryan George E 1998 Thomas Landsdowne Parr Moore Son and Legionnaire New Hibernia Review Iris Eireannach Nua 2 3 117 126 JSTOR 20557536 Maurois Andre 1984 1930 Byron Translated by Miles Hamish London Constable pp 331 332 ISBN 0 09 466010 7 Thomas Moore Irish Paris www irishmeninparis org Retrieved 23 March 2021 Moore 1993 pp 237 248 Kelly pp 322 327 a b Bew John 2011 Castlereagh Enlightenment War and Tyranny London Quercas pp 530 531 ISBN 978 0 85738 186 6 Moore Thomas 1818 The Fudge Family in Paris London Longmans pp 69 76 Peter Finnerty Irish Biography www libraryireland com Retrieved 27 March 2021 Book the First Chapter XIII Moore Thomas 1993 Political and Historical Writings on Irish and British Affairs by Thomas Moore Introduced by Brendan Clifford Belfast Athol Books pp 49 50 ISBN 0 85034 067 5 from Memoirs of Captain Rock Book the Second Chapter I Moore Thomas 1993 Political and Historical Writings on Irish and British Affairs by Thomas Moore Introduced by Brendan Clifford Belfast Athol Books pp 53 55 ISBN 0 85034 067 5 Woodham Smith Cecil 1962 The Great Hunger Ireland 1845 1849 London Penguin pp 410 411 ISBN 978 0 14 014515 1 Moore Thomas 1810 Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin Dublin Gilbert and Hodges pp 12 13 Kelly p 504 MacDonagh Oliver 1975 The Politicization of the Irish Catholic Bishops 1800 1850 The Historical Journal 18 1 40 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00008669 JSTOR 2638467 S2CID 159877081 Whelan Irene 2005 The Bible War in Ireland the Second Reformation and the Polarization of Protestant Catholic Relations 1800 1840 Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press Moore 1993 p 18 Good James Winder 1920 Irish Unionism 1920 London T Fisher Unwin p 106 Desmond Bowen The Protestant Crusade in Ireland 1800 70 A Study of Protestant Catholic Relations between the Act of Union and Disestablishment 1978 Moore Thomas 1833 Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion in Two Volumes London Longman Moore 1993 pp 161 162 a b Moore 1993 p 178 a b c Moore 1993 p 248 Brendan Clifford introduction to Moore 1993 p 15 Moore as Their Devoted Servant dedicates The Travel of an Irish Gentleman to the People of Ireland as a Defence their Ancient and National Faith Moore Thomas 1833 Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion in Two Volumes London Longman Moore 1993 Sheridan 1825 pp 81 82 Moore 1993 pp 132 134 Moore 1993 pp 153 154 Karl Marx 1869 Notes on Irish History 1869 Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels Ireland and the Irish Question New York International Publishers 1972 pp 316 360 Moore 1993 p 236 30 September 1831 Moore 1993 pp 234 235 6 May 1831 Moore 1993 p 237 25 July 1832 Moore 1993 p 236 30 September 1831 Moore 1993 pp 251 252 27 December 1836 a b Moore 1993 pp 241 242 1 8 November 1832 Moore 1993 p 233 18 February 1831 Duffy Charles Gavan 1886 The League of North and South London Chapman amp Hall Davitt Michael 1904 The fall of feudalism in Ireland or The story of the land league revolution London Dalcassian Publishing Company p 70 Kelly p 151 Kelly p 50 James W Flannery Dear Harp of My Country The Irish Melodies of Thomas Moore Nashville TN J S Sanders amp Co 1995 John Strachan Gifford William 1756 1826 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography H C G Matthew and Brian Harrison eds Oxford OUP 2004 online edition Lawrence Goldman ed 7 May 2007 a b Bardon Jonathan 2008 A History of Ireland in 250 Episodes Dublin Gill amp Macmillan pp 362 363 ISBN 978 0 7171 4649 9 Quinn James 2015 Young Ireland and the Writing of Irish History University College Dublin Press ISBN 978 1 910820 92 6 Vail Jeffery 4 July 2019 Sources and Style in Moore s Irish Melodies The Gothic Novel in Ireland c 1760 1829 European Romantic Review 30 4 465 469 465 doi 10 1080 10509585 2019 1638099 ISSN 1050 9585 S2CID 203049115 a b c d Nolan Emer 2009 The Tommy Moore Touch Ireland and Modernity in Joyce and Moore Dublin James Joyce Journal 2 2 64 77 doi 10 1353 djj 2009 0002 ISSN 2009 4507 S2CID 194076424 Heaney Seamus 1979 Introduction in David Hammond ed A Centenary selection from Moore s Melodies ISBN 978 0862330026 Dublin G Dalton p 9 a b Vail Jeffery 4 July 2019 Sources and Style in Moore s Irish Melodies The Gothic Novel in Ireland c 1760 1829 European Romantic Review 30 4 465 469 doi 10 1080 10509585 2019 1638099 ISSN 1050 9585 S2CID 203049115 MacWhite Eoin 1972 Thomas Moore and Poland Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy Section C Archaeology Celtic Studies History Linguistics Literature 72 49 62 ISSN 0035 8991 JSTOR 25506260 O Donnell Kathleen Ann 30 December 2019 Translations of Ossian Thomas Moore and the Gothic by 19th Century European Radical Intellectuals The Democratic Eastern Federation Lublin Studies in Modern Languages and Literature 43 4 89 doi 10 17951 lsmll 2019 43 4 89 104 ISSN 2450 4580 S2CID 214352160 MacWhite 1971 p 50 O Donnell 2019 p 91 a b Knight G Wilson 2016 Lord Byron s Marriage The Evidence of Asterisks London Routledge p 214 ISBN 978 1 138 67557 5 Retrieved 20 August 2020 Mayne Ethel Colburn 1969 1924 Byron New York Barnes amp Noble p 452 ISBN 0 389 01071 5 Cochran Peter 2014 The Burning of Byron s Memoirs New and Unpublished Essays and Papers Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars ISBN 978 1 4438 6815 0 pp 6 7 Marchand Leslie 1970 Byron a Portrait New York Knopf pp 466 467 ISBN 978 0 394 41820 9 Kells Stuart 2017 The Library A Catalogue of Wonders Melbourne Text Publishing p 158 ISBN 978 1 925355 99 4 Retrieved 12 July 2018 Moore 1993 p 232 Hawthorne Mark 1975 Thomas Moore s The Epicurean The Anacreontic Poet in Search of Eternity Studies in Romanticism 14 3 249 272 doi 10 2307 25599975 JSTOR 25599975 a b Schaaf Larry J Thomas Moore amp the Ladies of Lacock Retrieved 23 March 2021 Talbot Correspondence Project MOORE Thomas poet to TALBOT William Henry Fox foxtalbot dmu ac uk Retrieved 23 March 2021 William Henry Fox Talbot The Pencil of Nature 1994 197 In Timeline of Art History New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art October 2006 Retrieved 6 October 2008 Foundation Poetry 26 March 2021 Oft in the Stilly Night Scotch Air by Thomas Moore Poetry Foundation Retrieved 26 March 2021 i Thomas Moore i The Catholic Encyclopaedia Vol 10 1911 Thomas Moore Irish Biography www libraryireland com Retrieved 11 April 2021 Moore Thomas 2013 Russell John ed Memoirs Journal and Correspondence of Thomas Moore Cambridge Library Collection Literary Studies Vol 3 Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 cbo9781139567343 ISBN 978 1 108 05894 0 Love Timothy Spring 2017 Gender and the Nationalistic Ballad Thomas Davis Thomas Moore and Their Songs New Hibernia Review Center for Irish Studies at the University of St Thomas 21 1 76 doi 10 1353 nhr 2017 0005 ISSN 1534 5815 S2CID 149071105 660979 The James Joyce Songbook edited and with a commentary by Ruth Bauerle New York Garland Publishing 1982 pp 158 160 Norman Donaldson Oliver Onions in E F Bleiler ed Supernatural Fiction Writers New York Scribner s 1985 ISBN 0 684 17808 7 pp 505 512 Kennedy Maev 9 December 2012 Bodleian Library launches 2 2m bid to stop Fox Talbot archive going overseas The Guardian Retrieved 21 May 2020 Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1838 poetical illustration Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1839 Fisher Son amp Co Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1838 picture Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1839 Fisher Son amp Co Orientation in European Romanticism by Paul Hamilton 2022 page 113 publ Cambridge University Press Hunter Adrian ed 2020 James Hogg Contributions to English Irish and American Periodicals Edinburgh University Press pp 19 34 amp 212 ISBN 9780748695980Bibliography EditBenatti Francesca and Justin Tonra English Bards and Unknown Reviewers A Stylometric Analysis of Thomas Moore and the Christabel Review in Breac A Digital Journal of Irish Studies 3 2015 URL Clifford Brendan ed Political and Historical Writings on Irish and British Affairs by Thomas Moore Belfast Athol Books 1993 Dowden Wilfred S ed The Letters of Thomas Moore 2 vols Oxford Oxford University Press 1964 Dowden Wilfred S ed The Journal of Thomas Moore 6 vols Newark University of Delaware Press 1983 91 Gunning John P Moore Poet and Patriot Dublin M H Gill and Son 1900 Hunt Una Sources and Style in Moore s Irish Melodies London Routledge 2017 ISBN 978 1 4094 0561 0 hardback ISBN 978 1 315 44300 3 e book Jones Howard Mumford The Harp that Once Tom Moore and the Regency Period New York Henry Holt amp Co 1937 Kelly Ronan Bard of Erin The Life of Thomas Moore Dublin Penguin Ireland 2008 ISBN 978 1 84488 143 7 McCleave Sarah Caraher Brian eds Thomas Moore and Romantic Inspiration Poetry Music and Politics New York Routledge 2018 ISBN 978 1 138 28147 9 hardback ISBN 978 1 315 27113 2 e book Ni Chinneide Veronica The Sources of Moore s Melodies in Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 89 1959 2 pp 109 54 Strong L A G The Minstrel Boy A Portrait of Tom Moore London Hodder amp Stoughton amp New York A Knopf 1937 Tonra Justin Masks of Refinement Pseudonym Paratext and Authorship in the Early Poetry of Thomas Moore in European Romantic Review 25 5 2014 pp 551 73 doi 10 1080 10509585 2014 938231 Tonra Justin Pagan Angels and a Moral Law Byron and Moore s Blasphemous Publications in European Romantic Review 28 6 2017 pp 789 811 doi 10 1080 10509585 2017 1388797 Tonra Justin Write My Name Authorship in the Poetry of Thomas Moore New York Abingdon Routledge 2020 doi 10 4324 9781003090960 Vail Jeffery W The Literary Relationship of Lord Byron and Thomas Moore Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2001 Vail Jeffery W Thomas Moore in Ireland and America The Growth of a Poet s Mind in Romanticism 10 1 2004 pp 41 62 Vail Jeffery W Thomas Moore After the Battle in Julia M Wright ed The Blackwell Companion to Irish Literature 2 vols New York Wiley Blackwell 2010 vol 1 pp 310 25 Vail Jeffery W ed The Unpublished Letters of Thomas Moore 2 vols London Pickering and Chatto 2013 ISBN 978 1 84893 074 2 Vail Jeffery W Thomas Moore in Gerald Dawe ed The Cambridge Companion to Irish Poets Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2017 pp 61 73 White Harry The Keeper s Recital Music and Cultural History in Ireland 1770 1970 Cork Cork University Press 1998 ISBN 1 85918 171 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thomas Moore Wikiquote has quotations related to Thomas Moore Works by Thomas Moore at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Thomas Moore at Internet Archive Works by Thomas Moore at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Introducing Project ERIN Thomas Moore in Europe Thomas Moore in Europe QUB Blog Queen s University Belfast 16 June 2017 ERIN documents two of Thomas Moore s song series the Irish Melodies 1808 1834 and National Airs 1818 1827 as well as music inspired by his oriental romance Lalla Rookh 1817 Thomas Moore index entry at Poets Corner Moore s Irish Melodies arranged by C V Stanford Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Thomas Moore Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Thomas Moore melodies by machinehay on YouTube Free scores by Thomas Moore in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Free scores by Thomas Moore at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Thomas Moore collection 1813 1833 John J Burns Library Boston College Bates William 1883 Thomas Moore The Maclise Portrait Gallery of Illustrious Literary Characters Illustrated by Daniel Maclise 1 ed London Chatto and Windus pp 22 30 via Wikisource Thomas Moore recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Moore amp oldid 1138390172, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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