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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MOL-MOS |
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MOORE, THOMAS (1779-1852) , Irish poet, was born in Dublin on the 28th of May 1779. His father was John Moore, a prosperous grocer and wine merchant, and his mother's maiden name was Anastasia Codd. In 1793 Tom Moore's name first appeared in print, as a contributor of some verses " To Zelia," to a Dublin periodical, the Anthologia Hibernica. In the same year Roman Catholic students began to be admitted to Trinity College, Dublin, and in 1794 Moore's name was entered on the books, curiously enough, as a Protestant. At Trinity he made friends with Robert Emmet, and was nearly dragged into the plots of the United Irishmen. The events of 1798 and the execution of Emmet in 1803 made a deep impression on him. The words of Emmet's address to his judges, asking the charity of silence" Let no man write my epitaph "are enshrined by Moore in one of his lyrics, "Oh, breathe not his name!" (Irish Melodies, 18o8). The next song in the same collection" When he who adores thee "also owes its inspiration to Emmet's fate, and the conscientious Orientalism of Lalla Rookh does not conceal the pre-occupation of the writer with the United Irishmen when he writes of " The Fire Worshippers," and with Emmet and Sarah Curran when he describes the loves of Hafed and Hinda, especially in the well-known song, " She is far from the Land where her young Hero sleeps." In 1798 Moore graduated, and in the next year left for England to keep his terms at the Middle Temple. He rapidly became a social success in London. Joseph Atkinson, secretary in Ireland to the ordnance board, had been attracted to Moore in Dublin at first by his gifts as a singer. He now gave him an introduction to Francis Rawdon-Hastings; 2nd earl
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The success of the satirical epistles in the 18o6 volume encouraged Moore to produce further work of a similar kind, Corruption and Intolerance, Two Poems (18o8), and The Sceptic: a Philosophical Satire (1809), but the heroic couplet and the manner of Pope did not suit his talents. At the end of 18o6 he went to Dublin, and, with the exception of about six months in 1807 spent at Donington Park, the next three years were spent in Ireland. Here he met Miss Elizabeth Dyke, an actress, who became his wife in March 1811. They lived at first in London, but soon removed into the country, to Kegworth, near Lord Moira's seat, and then to Mayfield Cottage, near Ashbourne, Derbyshire. Moore had to spend much of his time in London, for the popularity of his songs led to an agreement with his publisher to increase the success of these by singing them himself at great houses. The inception of his Irish Melodies dates from 1807, and many of the best were written during the three years of his Irish visit. He had already published separate songs, some of them set to music of his own, when William Power suggested to him in 1807 the task of fitting words to a series of Irish airs supplied by Sir John Stevenson. He could not have found a task more exactly suited to his powers, and for a quarter of a century he enjoyed a regular income of 500 a year from Power for writing words to music. The first number of the Irish Melodies appeared in 18o8, and contained some of his best and most popular work. The rest appeared between 18o8 and 1834. In 1816 Stevenson and Moore published Sacred Songs, followed by a second number in 1824. In 1818 they began to adapt melodies from other nations. The first number of National Airs appeared in 1818, and was followed by others in 1820, 1822, 1826, and 1827. After 1812 he broke ground in a new fieldpolitical squib
In 1814 he contracted with the firm of Longmans
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exile he had written another Oriental poem, The Loves of the Angels (1822), which was hardly less popular than Lalla Rookh. He now became a contributor of satirical verse to The Times, the connexion lasting until 1827. He now wrote his Memoirs of the Life of Sheridan, first contemplated in 1814, which appeared, after some delay, in 1825. The Memoirs of Captain Rock (1824), in which he gives ahumorous but convincing account of English misgovernment in Ireland, was the result of a tour with Lord Lansdowne in western Ireland. His prose tale, The Epicurean, appeared in 1827, and the Legendary Ballads in 1830. In 1831 he completed his Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, probably his best piece of prose work.The death of Byron in 1824 raised the question of the publication of his Memoirs. Moore had parted with them in 1821 to John Murray for 2000. After they had come into Murray's possession, Moore began to have doubts about the propriety of publishing them, and an arrangement was therefore made that the 2000 should be regarded as a loan, to be repaid during Byron's lifetime, and that the MS. should be retained as a security. When Byron died the Memoirs were still unredeemed, and the right of publication therefore rested with Murray. Moore now borrowed the money from Longmans and induced Murray to give up his claim. The money was paid, and, after a heated discussion with Byron's executors, the MS. was burnt. It was partly the pressure of the debt thus contracted, and partly the expressed wish of Byron, that induced Moore to undertake for Murray The Letters and Journals of Lord Byron, with Notices of his Life (183o). The difficult task was executed with great skill and tact, and it remains, with all its defects and omissions, a valuable record. Moore's countrymen desired him to accept a seat in parliament for Limerick. The offer was accompanied by a scheme to present Moore with an estate in the county worth boo a year. It was made through the poet Gerald Griffin, who has left on record an account of the interview. Moore declined the honour. In 183o he allowed himself to be drawn
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Moore's last years were harassed by pecuniary difficulties, and by the weakness and misconduct of his sons, the elder of whom retired from the English army to enter the foreign legion of France. After the death of his last child in 1845, Moore became a total wreck, but he lived until the 25th of February 1852. He left sufficient provision for his wife in the Diary which he kept chiefly on her behalf. His other works are, A Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin (181o); A Melologue upon National Music (181I); an operetta, M.P. or The Blue Stocking (181 i) ; A Set of Glees (1827) ; The Summer Fete (1831); Evenings in Greece (1826-1832); Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion; Alciphron, a Poem (1839).See Memoirs, Journal and Correspondence of Thomas Moore (8 vols., 1853-1856), ed. by Lord John Russell, which contains an immense quantity of biographical material; The Poetical Works of Thomas Moore, Collected by Himself (to vols., 18401842); also Notes from the Letters of Thomas Moore to his Music Publisher, James Power (1854); and Prose and Verse, Humorous, Satirical and Sentimental, by Thomas Moore, with suppressed passages from the Memoirs of Lord Byron (1878), which includes Moore's contributions to the Edinburgh Review (1814-1834). Among modern editions of Moore's Poetical Works may be mentioned that by Charles Kent (the Centenary ed., 1879), and that by W. M. Rossetti (188o). Memoirs of Moore are prefixed to these editions. There are many contemporary references to him, especially in the journals and letters of Byron. There is an excellent life, by Stephen Gwynn, ThomasMoore (1905), written for the " English Men of Letters Series." See also monographs on'Moore, by G. Vallat (1886 and 1895), an essay on him as the poet " of Irish opposition and revolt " in Georg Brandes, Main Currents in Nineteenth Century Literature (vol. iv., 1875; Eng. trans., 1905). End of Article: MOORE, THOMAS (1779-1852) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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