Frank Frankfort Moore
For other people with the same name, see Frank Moore (disambiguation).
Frank Frankfort Moore (1855–1931) was an Irish dramatist, biographer, novelist and poet. Born in Limerick, Ireland, Moore worked as a journalist (1876–92) before gaining fame as an author of fiction. Died at St. Leonard's, May 1931.[1]
Poetry
- Flying from a Shadow
- Dawn
- The Discoverer
Novels
- The Slaver of Zanzibar (1889)
- The Silver Sickle (1890)
- They Call it Love (1895)
- The Sale of a Soul (1895)
- Phyllis of Philistia (1895)
- The Jessamy Bride (1896)
- 'The Millionaires (1898)
- A Nest of Linnets (1901)
- Love Alone is Lord (1905)
- The Artful Miss Dill (1906)
- Fanny's First Novel (1913)
- The Hand and Dagger (1928)
Plays
- A March Hare (1877)
- Moth and Flame (1878)
- Kitty Clive, Actress (1895)
Humour
- The Lighter Side of English Life (1914)
- A Mixed Grill (1914)
Biography
- The Life of Oliver Goldsmith (1910)
History
- A Georgian Pageant (1908)
Notable Quotations
"He knew that to offer a man friendship when love is in his heart is like giving a loaf of bread to one who is dying of thirst." The Jessamy Bride
"I think that if ever a mortal heard the voice of God, it would be in a garden at the cool of the day." A Garden of Peace
External links
- Works by Frank Frankfort Moore at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Frank Frankfort Moore at Internet Archive
- From Limerick City Library/Local Studies/Books & Journals/Worthies of Thomond, a collection of biographical notices of notable people of Co. Limerick & Clare by Robert Herbert
- ↑ Moore, Frank Frankfort (1931-05-14). "Distinguished Litterateur Dead". Limerick Chronicle.
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