Actions
  • Title
    Nicholas Moore Collection
  • Reference
    MS 2765
  • Production date
    1947-1953
  • Creator
  • Creator History
    Nicholas Moore (16 Nov 1918 - 26 Jan 1986) was an English poet, best known for his association with the 1940s New Apocalyptics movement. Born the elder son of the classicist and Cambridge philosopher George Edward Moore (1873-1958) and Dorothy Ely, he was also the nephew of the poet, artist and critic Thomas Sturge Moore (1870-1944), and the maternal grandson of editor and writer George Herbert Ely. Educated at the Dragon School Oxford and Leighton Park School, Reading, he spent a year at St Andrew's University, where he met G.S. Fraser, before going to Trinity College Cambridge. From his schooldays Moore wrote poetry every day and submitted it to various magazines. During his years as an undergraduate, Moore began his own literary review, Seven, working there as both editor and co-founder. After his graduation he continued to live in Cambridge, publishing pamphlets as part of Tambimuttu’s Poetry London imprint along with the works of George Scurfield, G. S. Fraser and Anne Ridler. He would later become Tambimuttu’s assistant, and eventually went on to work for Charles Wrey Gardiner’s Grey Walls Press. In the 1940s Moore married Priscilla Craig and gained a growing reputation as a poet, publishing several books and receiving prizes for his work. A conscientious objector, much of Moore’s verse was published in the war years. In the 1940s alone he published seven collections and two pamphlets of poetry, including works such as The Island and the Cattle (1941), A Wish in Season (1941), The Cabaret, the Dancer, the Gentleman (1942), and The Glass Tower in 1944, which included illustrations by a young Lucien Freud. Many of these poems are addressed to his wife Priscilla, with others dedicated to jazz musicians and the American poet Wallace Stevens. During this time Moore’s reputation grew significantly, where he was lauded as a contemporary of Dylan Thomas, and won several prizes for his works. W.H Auden awarded him the Patron Prize from Contemporary Poetry in 1945, and in 1947 he received the Harriet Monroe Memorial Prize from Poetry Magazine. By the beginning of the next decade, however, he had begun to find difficulty in publishing his work after his poetry was now out of fashion. He instead studied as a horticulturist, becoming an expert in the field and writing the book The Tall Bearded Iris (1956) during this time. After a series of personal setbacks, Moore became increasingly reclusive during the 1960s, suffering ill-health and becoming confined to a wheelchair due to complications from diabetes. However, this also allowed him more time to write, and he came to public notice again in 1968 after sending thirty-one entries, all under pseudonyms, to a translation competition for the Baudelaire poem Spleen (III) held by the Sunday Times. Written within the space of just two months, these poems were eventually collated into a single collection, Spleen, published in 1973 and Moore was championed by writers such as Anthony Rudolf and Peter Riley. . Moore continued to write poetry until his death in 1986, and in 1990 a selection of his poetry, Longings of the Acrobats, was published posthumously.
  • Scope and Content
    5 signed TS poems by Moore; 5 letters and 9 postcards from Nicholas Moore to Ian Fletcher; 1 printed poem by Nicholas Moore, "To the Muse and Benefactrice of Poetry", translated from the Latin and adapted to the times by Nicholas Moore, MenCard 2nd Series 12, published by The Menard Press.
  • Extent
    1 folder
  • Language
    English
  • Level of description
    fonds
  • Content person
  • Content Subject
  • Alternative numbers
    • Accession Number - MS 181 - University of Reading, Library
    • Accession Number - MS 228 - University of Reading, Library
    • Accession Number - MS 247 - University of Reading, Library
    • Accession Number - MS 677 - University of Reading, Library
    • Accession Number - MS 771 - University of Reading, Library
    • Accession Number - MS 1650 - University of Reading, Library
    • Accession Number - MS 1692 - University of Reading, Library
    • Accession Number - MS 2317 - University of Reading, Library
  • System of arrangment
    This material has been collected together from a number of individual accessions
  • Related objects
    RKP 169/11, MS 2750/354, RKP 185/14, RKP 199/6, RKP 128/7, MAC MOO