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 # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A Winter’s Evening in the Fens | C. K. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1881-01 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 43 | no | 17715 |
At Mürren, Switzerland | X. F. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1881-01 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 57 | no | 17716 |
The Declaration | Clarke, Mary Victoria Cowden | 1881-01 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 104 | no | 17717 |
Fat-Behind-the-Eye | Beerbohm, Julius | 1881-02 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 254–255 | no | 17718 |
The Thorn | Bain, Charlotte | 1881-03 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 342–343 | no | 17719 |
“The word of the sun to the sky” | Swinburne, Algernon Charles | 1881-03 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 352 | no | 17720 |
From Heine | Heine, Heinrich | 1881-03 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 376 | no | 17721 |
“Religious gems can ne’er adorn” | Ibn Adham, Ibrahim | 1881-04 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 459 | no | 17722 |
“Beneath the sculptured form which late you wore” | Lockhart, John Gibson | 1881-04 | Temple Bar Volume 61, Page 481 | no | 17723 |
“How could Hinda, the perfect Arabian mare” | Hinda | 1881-05 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 71 | no | 17724 |
“A tent wherein the breezes blow” | Maisûn | 1881-05 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 71 | no | 17725 |
Camilla | G. S. H. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1881-05 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 98–99 | no | 17726 |
“Clear sounds adown the silent street” | 1881-06 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 146 | no | 17727 | |
The First of May | Lewis, Gerrard | 1881-06 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 181–182 | no | 17728 |
The Groan of a Philistine | W. D. S. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1881-06 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 191–193 | no | 17729 |
“They told me that my drink was sin” | 1881-06 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 194 | no | 17730 | |
“One fine evening the Caliph” | Nuwas, Abu | 1881-06 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 198–199 | no | 17731 |
“Abu Nuwâs had studied more” | 1881-06 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 202–203 | no | 17732 | |
“If a merry blade am I” | Zoheir, Behâ el dîn | 1881-06 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 205 | no | 17733 |
Come and Gone | Holland, Laurence Gifford | 1881-06 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 252 | no | 17734 |
“Lo here the Lady Margaret North” | 1881-07 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 362 | no | 17735 | |
“Sir Thomas Leigh bi civil life” | 1881-07 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 363 | no | 17736 | |
“Whence, who, and what I was, how held in court” | 1881-07 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 363 | no | 17737 | |
”’What can Tommy Onslow do?’” | 1881-07 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 370 | no | 17738 | |
Margery Daw | Weatherly, Frederic Edward | 1881-07 | Temple Bar Volume 62, Page 399–400 | no | 17739 |
The ancient genealogic tree | Nuwas, Abu | 1881-09 | Temple Bar Volume 63, Page 36–37 | no | 17740 |
“The gentle gazelle she resembles” | Nuwas, Abu | 1881-09 | Temple Bar Volume 63, Page 40–41 | no | 17741 |
“I’ve studied all the learned works” | Nuwas, Abu | 1881-09 | Temple Bar Volume 63, Page 41–42 | no | 17742 |
“In the name of that God who has not an associate or partner—of One” | Nuwas, Abu | 1881-09 | Temple Bar Volume 63, Page 46–48 | no | 17743 |
A Message from the Dead | C. B. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1881-09 | Temple Bar Volume 63, Page 52–54 | no | 17744 |
Love’s Jealousie | MacDonald, Mosse | 1881-09 | Temple Bar Volume 63, Page 114 | no | 17745 |
“Not drunk is he who from the floor” | Peacock, Thomas Love | 1881-10 | Temple Bar Volume 63, Page 204 | no | 17746 |