A middle-class shilling monthly magazine, unillustrated, Temple Bar: A London Magazine for Town and Country Readers (1860-1906) was modelled on the higher circulating Cornhill Magazine. Temple Bar was edited by George Augustus Sala until it incorporated Bentley's Miscellany in 1868, when George Bentley became editor. In 1898, Maurice Macmillan bought the title and Gertrude Townshend Mayer took over the editorship.
Poem title | Poet(s) | Date | Vol etc. | Transcribed? | id # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
In Memoriam. December 14, 1861 | M. E. B. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1862-01 | Temple Bar Volume 4, Page 180 | no | 16988 |
VIII. Christmas in the City | Buchanan, Robert Williams | 1862-01 | Temple Bar Volume 4, Page 264–267 | no | 16989 |
A Castle in Spain | Collins, Mortimer | 1862-01 | Temple Bar Volume 4, Page 295–296 | no | 16990 |
Invited and Declining | Yates, Edmund Hodgson | 1862-02 | Temple Bar Volume 4, Page 326–328 | no | 16991 |
IX. Haunted London | Buchanan, Robert Williams | 1862-02 | Temple Bar Volume 4, Page 397–401 | no | 16992 |
Song | Monkhouse, William Cosmo | 1862-02 | Temple Bar Volume 4, Page 440 | no | 16993 |
A Curl | Buchanan, Robert Williams | 1862-03 | Temple Bar Volume 4, Page 492–495 | no | 16994 |
Alice | K. M. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1862-03 | Temple Bar Volume 4, Page 576 | no | 16995 |
The Legend of Roses | Power, Marguerite Agnes | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 41–42 | no | 16996 |
“Unthriftly loveliness, why dost thou spend” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 54–55 | no | 16997 |
“Who will believe my verse in time to come” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 56 | no | 16999 |
“O that you were yourself! But, love, you are” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 56 | no | 16998 |
“When in disgrace with fortune and men’s eyes” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 58 | no | 17000 |
“That thou hast her, it is not all my grief” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 59–60 | no | 17001 |
“So am I as the rich, whose blessed key” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 60 | no | 17002 |
“What is your substance, whereof are you made” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 61 | no | 17003 |
“Sin of self-love possesseth all mine eye” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 62 | no | 17004 |
“O for my sake do thou with fortune chide” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 63 | no | 17006 |
“Alas, ‘tis true, I have gone here and there” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 63 | no | 17005 |
“So now I have confessed that he is thine” | Shakespeare, William | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 65 | no | 17007 |
“Come from my First, ay, come!” | Praed, William Mackworth (1802-1839) | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 99 | no | 17009 |
“My First was dark o’er earth and air” | Praed, William Mackworth (1802-1839) | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 99 | no | 17008 |
On Seeing the Speaker Asleep in His Chair. In One of the Debates of the First Reformed Parliament. | Praed, William Mackworth (1802-1839) | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 100 | no | 17010 |
“Drowned! Drowned!” | 1862-04 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 152 | no | 17011 | |
Then—and Now | Yates, Edmund Hodgson | 1862-05 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 180–182 | no | 17012 |
“When on the scaffold he did say” | 1862-05 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 289 | no | 17014 | |
“Farewell, queen, children, sister (Louis Cries)” | 1862-05 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 289 | no | 17013 | |
Passed By | Donaldson, A. | 1862-05 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 296 | no | 17015 |
The Greek Potter and His Two Vases | W. T. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1862-06 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 326 | no | 17016 |
“With a sharp steel pen for slaughter ripe” | 1862-06 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 373 | no | 17017 | |
By the Seaside | Buchanan, Robert Williams | 1862-06 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 389–390 | no | 17018 |
Amari Aliquid | Wilson, Frederick Collins | 1862-06 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 430 | no | 17019 |
Gladys the Lost | Collins, Mortimer | 1862-07 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 511 | no | 17020 |
The Rose’s Death | 1862-07 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 527 | no | 17021 | |
Parting for Ever | Donaldson, A. | 1862-07 | Temple Bar Volume 5, Page 560 | no | 17022 |
“I love at eve, when the western sky” | 1862-08 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 24 | no | 17023 | |
A Vision of Venice | Gray, David | 1862-08 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 42–43 | no | 17024 |
Written in Sand | Edwards, Annie | 1862-08 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 104–105 | no | 17025 |
Requiescat in Pace | Donaldson, A. | 1862-08 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 138 | no | 17026 |
“O ye ladies fair who bathe at beautiful Bognor” | 1862-09 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 239 | no | 17027 | |
“Ocean, solemn and strong, by wild winds swept over often” | 1862-09 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 242–243 | no | 17028 | |
“Of noble race was Skinking” | d’Urfey, Thomas | 1862-09 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 276 | no | 17029 |
Love’s Inconsistencies | Donaldson, A. | 1862-09 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 288 | no | 17030 |
“With justice may Lovat this adage apply” | 1862-10 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 296 | no | 17031 | |
Aspromonte | Monkhouse, William Cosmo | 1862-10 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 386 | no | 17032 |
Two Country Houses | Thornbury, George Walter | 1862-11 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 500–501 | no | 17033 |
“Rosy lips indeed are sweet” | 1862-11 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 509 | no | 17035 | |
“Rosy lips are sweet to kiss” | 1862-11 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 509 | no | 17034 | |
In November | Gibbon, Charles | 1862-11 | Temple Bar Volume 6, Page 558–559 | no | 17036 |
“Little Jack Snook” | The Titmarshian Sage | 1862-12 | Temple Bar Volume 7, Page 72 | no | 17037 |
If! | Hood, Tom (Jnr) | 1862-12 | Temple Bar Volume 7, Page 140 | no | 17038 |