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 # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
“Is there a bitter pang for love removed” | Hood, Thomas | 1897-02 | Temple Bar Volume 110, Page 191 | no | 18325 |
“In Fabius, Rome a warrior statesman found” | 1897-03 | Temple Bar Volume 110, Page 336 | no | 18326 | |
Time | Powell, S. W. | 1897-03 | Temple Bar Volume 110, Page 361 | no | 18327 |
Fragment—The Eagle | Tennyson, Alfred | 1897-04 | Temple Bar Volume 110, Page 497 | no | 18328 |
To His Mistress | Herrick, Robert | 1897-05 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 37 | no | 18329 |
Upon a Maid | Herrick, Robert | 1897-05 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 39 | no | 18331 |
Upon a Virgin | Herrick, Robert | 1897-05 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 39 | no | 18330 |
To His Water-Nymphs | Herrick, Robert | 1897-05 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 41 | no | 18332 |
“Oh, have you seen my Dinah” | 1897-05 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 44 | no | 18333 | |
Deus in Machina | Kennedy, H. A. | 1897-05 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 69–70 | no | 18334 |
“It is not to be thought of that the flood” | Wordsworth, William (1770-1850) | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 268 | no | 18335 |
Silence | Hood, Thomas | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 277–278 | no | 18336 |
Work Without Hope | Coleridge, Samuel Taylor | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 278–279 | no | 18337 |
To Night | White, Joseph Blanco | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 281 | no | 18338 |
“Full many a glorious morning have I seen” | Shakespeare, William | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 281–282 | no | 18339 |
On His Blindness | Milton, John | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 282 | no | 18340 |
On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic | Wordsworth, William (1770-1850) | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 283 | no | 18341 |
“So gentle, honester than others are” | Alighieri, Dante | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 285 | no | 18344 |
“So gentle seems my lady and so pure” | Alighieri, Dante | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 285 | no | 18343 |
“My lady looks so gentle and so pure” | Alighieri, Dante | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 284–285 | no | 18342 |
“How do I love thee? Let me count the ways” | Browning, Elizabeth Barrett | 1897-06 | Temple Bar Volume 111, Page 286 | no | 18345 |
“Oh, gaily sings the bird! and the wattle-boughs are stirred” | Gordon, Adam Lindsay | 1897-10 | Temple Bar Volume 112, Page 223 | no | 18347 |
“Jenny’s gone a harvesting” | Richepin, Jean | 1897-12 | Temple Bar Volume 112, Page 487 | no | 18349 |
“Hail to the happy Hours! when Fancy led” | Delany, Mary | 1897-12 | Temple Bar Volume 112, Page 507 | no | 18350 |