Thomas Moult

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Thomas Moult (1893–1974) was a versatile English journalist and writer, and one of the Georgian poets. He is known for his annual anthologies Best Poems of the Year, 1922 to 1943, which were popular verse selections taken from periodicals on both sides of the Atlantic. His poem 'Truly He Hath A Sweet Bed' from Down Here the Hawthorn was set to music for chorus and orchestra by Cyril Rootham (as Brown Earth, 1921–2).[https://rootham.org/playlist/opus_065/listen_opus065_synth_mscore.html score and electronic realisation at Cyril Rootham website]

Life

He was born in Derbyshire, to Jewish parents.William D. Rubinstein, Michael Jolles, Hilary L. Rubinstein, The Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History, Palgrave Macmillan (2011), p. 702 He wrote much newspaper criticism, on music and drama and as a book reviewer; and on sport in the popular press.

He founded a magazine, Voices, for young writers, in 1919, publishing Sherwood Anderson, A. E. Coppard, Louis Golding, F. V. Branford, and Neville Cardus. It has been described as "eminently uncontroversial".Robert H. Ross, The Georgian Revolt, p. 203.

From 1952 to 1962 he was president of the Poetry Society and chairman of the editorial board of Poetry Review.Wisden 1975, p. 1081.

Family

Moult's daughter Joy was the first wife of psychologist Oliver Zangwill.

Works

  • Snow over Elden (1920) novel
  • Down Here the Hawthorn (1921) poems
  • Cenotaph: A Book of Remembrance in Poetry and Prose for November the Eleventh (1923) editor
  • The Comely Lass (1923) novel
  • Forty Years in My Bookshop by Walter T. Spencer (1927) editor
  • Barrie (1928) criticism
  • Derbyshire Prose and Verse (1929) editor
  • Saturday Night (1931) novel
  • Sally Go Round the Moon (1931)
  • Playing for England by Jack Hobbs (1931) editor
  • Mary Webb: Her Life and Work (1932)
  • W. H. Davies (1933)
  • Willow Pattern (1934) cricket poems
  • Bat and Ball (1935) cricket anthology

''The Best Poems of 1931''

Notes

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