Thomas Moore
Thomas Moore, (born May 28, 1779, Dublin, Ire.—died Feb. 25, 1852, Wiltshire, Eng.), Irish poet, satirist, composer, and political propagandist. He was a close friend of Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley.
“The Last Rose of Summer” by Thomas Moore; from a 1914 recording, soprano solo performed by Marie Rappold.University of California, Santa Barbara “Oft in the Stilly Night” by Thomas Moore; from a 1914 recording, performed by the Knickerbocker Quartette.University of California, Santa Barbara
The son of a Roman Catholic wine merchant, Moore graduated from Trinity College, Dublin, in 1799 and then studied law in London. His major poetic work, Irish Melodies (1807–34), earned him an income of £500 annually for a quarter of a century. It contained such titles as “The Last Rose of Summer” and “Oft in the Stilly Night.” The Melodies, a group of 130 poems set to the music of Moore and of Sir John Stevenson and performed for London’s aristocracy, aroused sympathy and support for the Irish nationalists, among whom Moore was a popular hero.
Lalla Rookh (1817), a narrative poem set (on Byron’s advice) in an atmosphere of Oriental splendour, gave Moore a reputation among his contemporaries rivaling that of Byron and Sir Walter Scott. It was perhaps the most translated poem of its time, and it earned what was till then the highest price paid by an English publisher for a poem (£3,000). Moore’s many satirical works, such as The Fudge Family in Paris (1818), portray the politics and manners of the Regency period.
In 1824 Moore became a participant in one of the most celebrated episodes of the Romantic period. He was the recipient of Byron’s memoirs, but he and the publisher John Murray burned them, presumably to protect Byron. Moore later brought out the Letters and Journals of Lord Byron (1830), in which he included a life of the poet. Moore’s lifelong espousal of the Catholic cause led him to produce such brilliant works as his parody of agrarian insurgency, The Memoirs of Captain Rock (1824), and his courageous biography of the revolutionary leader of the 1798 rebellion, The Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald (1831).
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Irish literature: The 19th century…lyrics to Bunting’s music was Thomas Moore, who published 10 separate numbers of hisIrish Melodies between 1807 and 1834. These hugely popular drawing-room songs (including “Let Erin Remember the Days of Old,” “Dear Harp of My Country,” and “Oft in the Stilly Night”) reinvented for audiences across Ireland and… -
biography: Firsthand knowledge…imperatoris [“Life of Charlemagne”] or Thomas Moore’sLetters and Journals of Lord Byron [1830]). Biography based on a living relationship has produced a wealth of masterpieces: Tacitus’s life of his father-in-law in theAgricola , William Roper’s life of his father-in-law Sir Thomas More (1626), John Gibson Lockhart’s biography (1837–38) of… -
Emma: Publication and receptionIrish poet Thomas Moore wrote in a similar vein. He describedEmma as “the very perfection of novel-writing.”…

