Thomas Moore (28 May 1779 – 25 February 1852) was an Irish writer, poet, and lyricist, widely regarded in his lifetime as Ireland's "national bard". The acclaim rested primarily on the popularity of his Irish Melodies (the first of ten volumes appearing in 1808). In these, Moore set to old Irish tunes verses that spoke to a narrative of Irish dispossession, loss, and resistance. With his romantic work Lalla Rookh (1817), in which these same themes are explored in an elaborate orientalist allegory, Moore achieved wider critical recognition. Translated into several languages, and adapted and arranged for musical performance by, among others, Robert Schumann, the chivalric verse-narrative established Moore as one of the leading exemplars of European romanticism.

In England, Moore moved in aristocratic Whig circles where, in addition to a salon performer, he was appreciated as a squib writer and master of political satire. Chief among his targets, in successive Tory governments, was Lord Castlereagh in whose promises of "emancipation" Moore believed his fellow Catholics in Ireland had been deceived. In the verse novel The Fudge Family in Paris (1818), and its sequels, he pillories the Foreign Secretary for employing the same "faithless craft" used to press Ireland into a union with Great Britain to accommodate restoration and reaction in Europe.

Wary in Ireland of an overtly Catholic place-seeking nationalism, Moore refused a nomination to stand with Daniel O'Connell and his Repeal Association for the Westminster parliament. His broader sympathies were expressed in his several prose works, including a biography of the United Irish leader Lord Edward Fitzgerald (1831) and the Memoirs of Captain Rock (1824). Complementing Maria Edgeworth's Castle Rackrent (1800), the satirical novel is the story, not of Anglo-Irish landowners, but of their exhausted tenants driven to the semi-insurrection of Whiteboyism.

Moore continues to be remembered chiefly for his Melodies (typically "The Minstrel Boy" and "The Last Rose of Summer"). He is also recalled, less generously, for the role he is thought to have played in the destruction 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 County Kerry over his parents' grocery shop in Aungier Street, Dublin, 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, 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”).

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

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 the literary salon of the poet and satirist Henrietta Battier, and his friends Robert Emmet, with him at Trinity, 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. Mirroring the conceit of James Macpherson's Ossian cycle (poems which the Scottish writer claimed to have discovered and translated from Gaelic), it called on the Irish to recall the heroism of their ancestors and strike for freedom.

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. Though a friend of Emmet, he had not taken the United Irish oath with Emmet and Hudson, and he was to play no part in the republican rebellion of 1798 (Moore was at home, ill in bed), Later, in a biography of the United Irish leader Lord Edward Fitzgerald (1831), he made clear his sympathies, not hiding his regret that the French expedition under General Hoche failed in December 1796 to effect a landing. Moore pays homage to Emmet's sacrifice on the gallows in the song "O, Breathe Not His Name" (1808).

London society and first success

150px|thumb|left|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.

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.

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 against government and loyalist outrages, and to have urged a policy of conciliation. 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.

As in London, Moore secured high-society introductions. But of many of his hosts he had a low opinion including, with reports of a slave mistress (Sally Hemings), of President Thomas Jefferson: "The weary statesman for repose has fled/ From the halls of council to his negro shed . . . / And dreams of freedom in his slave's embrace!" Moore later conceded that, having consorted too closely in America with émigré European aristocrats and their friends among the opposition Federalists, he had developed a somewhat "tainted", somewhat partisan, view of the new republic. were in Jefferson's Democratic-Republican camp.

Following his return to England in 1804, Moore published Epistles, Odes, and Other Poems (1806). In addition to complaints about America and Americans, 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."

One of the pieces in Epistles, Odes and Other Poems—later gathered together as “Poems Relating to America” in the second volume of Moore's Poetical Works (1840)—became a recognised influence in nineteenth-century French-Canadian poetry. A source of Irish-Canadian pride, “A Canadian Boat Song. Written on the River St. Lawrence” also contributed to the rhetoric of Canadian nationalism (which, paradoxically, was to heightened by the cross-border raids of Irish-American Fenians).

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. 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. 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 and patron, Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 3rd Marquess of Lansdowne. Their company included Sheridan and John Philpot Curran, both in their bitter final years.

Thomas 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.

Despite these heavy personal losses, the marriage of Thomas Moore is generally regarded to have been a happy one.

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. However, 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 (a 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. Byrne relented, only to engage in a row over a toast proposed to Thomas Reynolds, a reputed '98 informer.

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 the antics of the Prince Regent, and in particular, his highly public efforts to disgrace and divorce Princess Caroline, proving a lightning rod 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".

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": "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 "court the slave, can swear he shall be freed", but then "basely spurns him" when his "point is gain'd".

Through a mutual connection, Moore learned that Castlereagh had been particularly stung by the verses of the Tutor in the Fudge Family.

The Memoirs of Captain Rock

thumb|left|[[The Installation of Captain Rock by 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". The Memoirs of Captain Rock (1824) might have been Moore's response to those who questioned whether the son of a Dublin grocer entertaining English audiences from his home in 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 folkloric but the history is in earnest. For Landsdowne, as for Russell and other of Moore's Whig friends who celebrated his novel's success, it may have been significant that when the 300-year chronicle finally catches up with Captain Rock in the post-Napoleonic depression, the focus of violent discontent is no longer Catholic dispossession or Anglo-Irish landlordism per se. The Rockites' fury is directed at the tithes levied on top of rents on behalf of the Anglican clergy. But for this shift to "safer ground", it is unlikely that The Times of London would have praised the author for his "love of justice". that British governments began to assume responsibility for agrarian conditions. At the time of Captain Rocks publication (1824), the commanding issue of the day was not tithes or tenant rights. It was the final instalment of Catholic Emancipation: Castlereagh's unredeemed promise of Catholic admission to parliament.

Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin

thumb|right|"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 as a consequence of the English conquest. The native aristocracy had sought in Rome a "spiritual alliance" against the new "temporal tyranny" at home.

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,

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 County 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

thumb|[[Portrait of Thomas Moore by Martin Archer Shee, c.1817, National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin.]]

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". 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".

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. is a vindication of the reformed faith by an author described as "not the editor of Captain Rock's Memoirs" — the Spanish exile and Protestant convert Joseph Blanco White.

In 1816, Moore had published a A Series of Sacred Songs, Duets and Trios of which the first, "Thou art, O God", became a popular hymn. and the example of a devout mother, Moore appears to have abandoned the formal practice of his religion as soon as he entered Trinity. but not a critical success. Moore acknowledged scholarly failings, some of which stemmed from his inability to read documentary sources in Irish.

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). 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"] 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". 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.

Irish Melodies

right|thumb|Moore's Melodies, Centenary Edition, 1880

In what has since been regarded as one of the chief cultural expressions of the linguistic transition in Ireland from Gaelic to English, from 1806 Moore began setting English lyrics to the tunes found in Edward Bunting's A General Collection of the Ancient Irish Music (1797). Such was their popularity that between 1808 and 1834 his Irish Melodies ran to ten volumes, with translations into German, Italian, Hungarian, Czech, and French, and settings by Ludwig van Beethoven and Hector Berlioz. In the United States, "The Last Rose of Summer" alone sold more than a million copies.

Moore was in no doubt that the 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". They distinguished him in his lifetime, as his country's national bard. It was an honour he sought to maintain by declining an offer from Dublin Castle to become Ireland's first poet laureate, a salaried position he believed could not but compromise the expression he gave to popular national sentiment.

Daniel O'Connell liberally employed Melodies in his last campaign for Repeal. In the greatest of his "monster meetings" at the Hill of Tara 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".

The Young Irelanders, who, like Moore, distanced themselves from O'Connell, found Moore's lyrical effusions less convincing. In what he described as the "whining lamentation over our eternal fall, and miserable appeals to our masters to regard us with pity", Thomas Davis detected a tone of national resignation and defeatism. A future generation of Irish writers took a similar view. Moore's tone, according to the poet Seamus Heaney, was found to be "too light, too conciliatory, too colonisé".

Recently, there has been a reappraisal more sympathetic "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'". It notes that Moore's contemporaries among the subject people's of eastern and central Europe, had a keen appreciation of the Melodies political undertones. Polish intellectuals, in particular, recognised in the Gothic elements of the Melodies, as well as of Lalla Rookh (“a dramatization of Irish patriotism in an Eastern parable”) and Captain Rock, "a cloak of culture and fraternity".

Lalla Rookh

Next to the Melodies, Lalla Rookh (1817) was Moore's greatest contemporary success. In a testimony to the literary reputation his Melodies had already established, Longmans, the publishers, agreed to largest advance, £3150, yet commanded by a book of verse.

Possibly the most translated epic verses of its time, the work was the basis for the operas Lalla-Rûkh (1821) by Gaspare Spontini, Lalla-Roukh by Félicien David (1862), Feramors by Anton Rubinstein (1863), and The Veiled Prophet by Charles Villiers Stanford (1879). One of the interpolated tales, Paradise and the Peri, was interpreted in a choral-orchestral work by Robert Schumann (1843). But set against the backdrop of the enduring conflict between the Mughal throne and its Zoroastrian subjects — "a theme that had much to recommend it to an Irishman" 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", when, following Byron's death in 1824, Moore learned that Murray had deemed the material unfit for publication he spoke of settling the matter with a duel. 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.

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".

1844 photograph by Henry Fox Talbot

thumb|right|250px|Moore stands centre in a photograph by William Henry Fox Talbot dated April 1844

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.

To the left of Moore stands Henrietta Horatia Maria Fielding (1809–1851), a close friend of the Moores, Talbot's half-sister the first commercially published book to be illustrated with photographs.

Death and receding reputation

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 25 February 1852, in his seventy-third year, having outlived his wife, his five children and most of his friends and companions. thumb|left|Window at [[Ottawa Public Library features Moore with Dickens, Archibald Lampman, Walter Scott, Byron, Tennyson, and Shakespeare ]]

He 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.

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

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. But, while popular editions of his Melodies and Airs continued for some time to appear, in post-famine Ireland Moore's literary stock "crashed".

Not only did the bathos and nostalgia of Moore's verse appear suspect, its intended piano-accompanied singing and recitation did not survive the developments in mass media: cheap print, the recorded voice, the moving image. As a form, the verse narrative was almost entirely abandoned. Describing his burial site in 1937, Moore's biographer Howard Mumford Jones wrote: "To the grave of a Catholic buried in a Protestant churchyard, of an Irishman at rest in Wiltshire, of the genius once thought to be immortal and now no longer read, almost no one comes". or "The Last Rose of Summer".

  • Irish American scholar, singer and critic James W. Flannery (born 1936) is widely recognized as a skilled interpreter of Thomas Moore's art songs. In 1997 he released a book and recording named Dear Harp of My Country: The Irish Melodies of Thomas Moore.
  • Oliver Onions quotes Moore's poem "Oft in the Stilly Night" in his 1910 ghost story "The Cigarette Case". 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.
  • Letitia Elizabeth Landon offers a tribute in her poem , in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1839.
  • Edna O'Brien wrote a short story entitled "Oft in the Stilly Night" in her 1990 story collection Lantern Slides.

In fiction

The character Tickle Tommy in John Paterson's Mare, James Hogg's allegorical satire on the Edinburgh publishing scene first appearing 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". He also parodied Moore in his stage shows. 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 Finnegans Wake.

List of works

Prose

  • A Letter to the Roman Catholics of Dublin (1810)
  • Memoirs of Captain Rock (1824)
  • Memoirs of the Life of Richard Brinsley Sheridan (2 vols) (1825)
  • The Epicurean, a Tale (29 June 1827)
  • Letters & Journals of Lord Byron, with Notices of his Life (2 vols.) (1830, 1831)
  • The Life and Death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald (1831)
  • Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion (2 vols.) (1833)
  • 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)
  • Political and Historical Writings on Irish and British Affairs by Thomas Moore, Introduced by Brendan Clifford (1993).

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 with Notes Addressed to an Englishman by an Irishman (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)
  • Anacreontic 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 [[Spencer Perceval|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)
  • The Fudge Family in Paris (verse novel, 1818)
  • National Airs, 1 (23 April 1818)
  • <nowiki>To the Ship in which Lord C[AST[LE]R[EA]GH Sailed for the Continent</nowiki>] (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 (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)
  • The Fudge Family in England (verse novel,1835)
  • Vocal Miscellany, 2 (1835)
  • Irish Melodies (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)
  • The poetical works of Thomas Moore, complete in three volumes, Paris, Baudry's European Library (1841)
  • 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

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.
  • 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); (hardback), (e-book).
  • Jones, Howard Mumford: The Harp that Once: A Chronicle of the Life of Thomas Moore (New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1937).
  • Kelly, Linda: Ireland's Minstrel: A Life of Tom Moore, Poet, Patriot and Byron's Friend (London: I.B. Tauris, 2006);
  • Kelly, Ronan: Bard of Erin. The Life of Thomas Moore (Dublin: Penguin Ireland, 2008), .
  • McCleave, Sarah / Caraher, Brian (eds): Thomas Moore and Romantic Inspiration. Poetry, Music, and Politics (New York: Routledge, 2018); (hardback), (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.&nbsp;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.&nbsp;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.&nbsp;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.&nbsp;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.&nbsp;310–25.
  • Vail, Jeffery W. (ed.): The Unpublished Letters of Thomas Moore, 2 vols (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2013), .
  • Vail, Jeffery W.: "Thomas Moore", in: Gerald Dawe (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Irish Poets (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017), pp.&nbsp;61–73.
  • White, Harry: The Keeper's Recital. Music and Cultural History in Ireland 1770–1970 (Cork: Cork University Press, 1998), .
  • White, Terence de Vere: Tom Moore: The Irish Poet (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1977).
  • Thomas Moore index entry at Poets' Corner
  • Moore's Irish Melodies, arranged by C. V. Stanford
  • Thomas Moore melodies by 'machinehay' on YouTube
  • Thomas Moore collection, 1813–1833 (John J. Burns Library, Boston College)
  • Thomas Moore recordings at the Discography of American Historical Recordings.