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 Switzerland, 1889 | Kemble, Fanny | 1890-01 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 65–66 | yes | 18017 |
“For Better, for Worse” | Fowler, Ellen Thorneycroft | 1890-01 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 114–115 | yes | 18018 |
“Donec Aspiret Dies, et Inclinentur Umbrae” | Beresford, John Jervis | 1890-02 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 187 | yes | 18019 |
“Camelot-noon” | Hardinge, William Money | 1890-02 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 215–217 | yes | 18020 |
The Dead Heart. (Written after seeing Mr. Irving and Miss Ellen Terry in the play of that name) | Weatherly, Frederic Edward | 1890-03 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 330 | yes | 18021 |
The True Christian | Mackay, Charles | 1890-03 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 357–359 | yes | 18022 |
Lord Harry | Weatherly, Frederic Edward | 1890-03 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 379 | yes | 18023 |
On the Wing | C. B. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1890-03 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 423 | yes | 18024 |
Gone to Baltimore | Weatherly, Frederic Edward | 1890-04 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 510 | yes | 18025 |
To a Friend. On His Taking Possession of a House He Had Built | Beresford, John Jervis | 1890-04 | Temple Bar Volume 88, Page 526 | yes | 18026 |
Sonnet. The Old and the New Self | Johnson, Charles F. | 1890-05 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 28 | yes | 18027 |
Deaf Beethoven | Hodges, Sydney | 1890-05 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 43–44 | yes | 18028 |
Pearl | Hervey, Charles | 1890-05 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 86 | yes | 18029 |
To Lily | Rae (pseudonym) | 1890-05 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 96–97 | yes | 18030 |
Life—or Death | Spottiswoode Brodie, Hilda | 1890-06 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 184–186 | yes | 18031 |
“In times less pleasant and more fierce, of old” | 1890-06 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 203 | yes | 18032 | |
A Noble Game of Lawn Tennis | Stevens, G. L. | 1890-06 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 207–209 | yes | 18033 |
To a Nightingale | Clifford, L. M. H. | 1890-07 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 322 | yes | 18034 |
To Annette | Waller, Bryan Charles | 1890-07 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 421 | yes | 18035 |
God’s Music | Weatherly, Frederic Edward | 1890-08 | Temple Bar Volume 89, Page 512 | yes | 18036 |
To the Towy in Time of Drought | Beresford, John Jervis | 1890-09 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 65–66 | yes | 18037 |
Meditatur. Studentissimus Quidam, in Mediis Laboribus a Virgine Carissima Interpellatus | Daniels, George H. | 1890-10 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 230 | yes | 18038 |
“Toddlin’ whoam fra th’ market rant” | Waugh, Edwin | 1890-10 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 233 | yes | 18039 |
“What ails thee, my son Robin?” | Waugh, Edwin | 1890-10 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 234–235 | yes | 18040 |
Papageno | Weatherly, Frederic Edward | 1890-10 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 241–242 | yes | 18041 |
“Dux Femina Facti.” An Emancipation Ode, to Be Sung by Trebles Only. A.D. 1890 | G. S. H. (poet; Temple Bar) | 1890-10 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 267–269 | yes | 18042 |
On a Velvet Coat of the Last Century | 1890-11 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 349–350 | yes | 18043 | |
Sea-foam and Driftwood | Salmon, Arthur Leslie | 1890-11 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 415–416 | yes | 18044 |
Spring’s Immortality | Bell, Mackenzie | 1890-11 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 426 | yes | 18045 |
The Wonder-Working Queen | 1890-12 | Temple Bar Volume 90, Page 588 | yes | 18046 |