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 # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Juvenal in London. Juv.: Satire III.—(continued) | Rogers, James Edwin Thorold | 1874-01 | Temple Bar Volume 40, Page 209–220 | no | 17473 |
Cupid’s Pupils. Suggested by Mr. Frith’s Picture | Watson, Alfred Edward Thomas | 1874-01 | Temple Bar Volume 40, Page 240 | no | 17474 |
II. The Classics | Earle, John Charles | 1874-01 | Temple Bar Volume 40, Page 256 | no | 17476 |
I. To an Original Thinker | Earle, John Charles | 1874-01 | Temple Bar Volume 40, Page 256 | no | 17475 |
Juvenal in London. Juv.: Satire III.—(continued) | Rogers, James Edwin Thorold | 1874-02 | Temple Bar Volume 40, Page 320–328 | no | 17477 |
The Pervigilium Veneris. (The Wake of Venus) | E. H. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1874-03 | Temple Bar Volume 40, Page 495–498 | no | 17478 |
Horace Without His Toga. Satires, II. i. A Dialogue | Rogers, James Edwin Thorold | 1874-04 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 43–48 | no | 17479 |
Horace Without His Toga. Epistles. I. xx. The Author to his Book | Rogers, James Edwin Thorold | 1874-05 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 194–196 | no | 17480 |
Daphnis | Theocritus | 1874-05 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 405–407 | no | 17481 |
Amaryllis | Theocritus | 1874-05 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 408–409 | no | 17482 |
“I. Beautiful are the laurels! beautiful” | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 493 | no | 17483 | |
“IV. I’ll twine white violets, and I will twine” | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 494 | no | 17486 | |
“V. White violets are in bloom; narcissus, too” | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 494 | no | 17487 | |
“II. Rest here, beneath the shelter of the rock” | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 493–494 | no | 17484 | |
“III. Sit underneath this pine with lofty boughs” | Plato | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 494 | no | 17485 |
“VI. Loosen the Long stern-cables from your ships | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 494–495 | no | 17488 | |
“VIII. Unite with me to praise the Thracians” | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 495 | no | 17490 | |
“VII. Weeping I died, as weeping I was born” | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 495 | no | 17489 | |
“X. When gentle winds ripple the grey-green sea” | Moschus | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 496 | no | 17492 |
“IX. His ox, in fieldwork used, when overworn” | 1874-07 | Temple Bar Volume 41, Page 495–496 | no | 17491 | |
“This figure that thou here seest put” | Jonson, Ben | 1874-08 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 47 | no | 17493 |
“What charming peals are these” | Jonson, Ben | 1874-08 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 49 | no | 17495 |
“Have you seen but a bright lily glow” | Jonson, Ben | 1874-08 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 49 | no | 17494 |
The River Stour | Wilson, Frederick Collins | 1874-08 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 111–112 | no | 17496 |
A College Garden Reverie | Weatherly, Frederic Edward | 1874-09 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 211–212 | no | 17497 |
“Among the cliffs, along the shore” | de Viau, Théophile | 1874-10 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 393 | no | 17500 |
“Whenas some garden fair I view” | de Viau, Théophile | 1874-10 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 394–395 | no | 17501 |
“Listen, the birds with warbling faint” | de Viau, Théophile | 1874-10 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 399–400 | no | 17502 |
“Father of all sweet dreams and Lord of rest” | de Viau, Théophile | 1874-10 | Temple Bar Volume 42, Page 401 | no | 17503 |