TEMPLE BAR A London Magazine for Town and Country Readers - Volume III August 1861 - November 1861
London: Richard Bentley, 1861. Leather_bound. A 3/4 green leather hardcover ex-library book. Spine and covers scuffed; edges and corners rubbed. Former owner name and stamp on endpapers; stamp on title page. Mild foxing, therwise, text clean and binding tight. Item #212638
This volume includes an article called "All About Hair and Beards," installments of "The Seven Sons of Mammon" by George Augustus Sala, and an article on "Cotton" in which the author attempts to justify slavery as necessary to the industry.
Volume 3 of Temple Bar, a literary periodical of the mid and late 19th and very early 20th centuries (1860–1906). The complete title was Temple Bar – A London Magazine for Town and Country Readers. It was initially edited by George Augustus Sala, and Arthur Ransome was the final editor before it folded, while he developed his literary career. It was also edited by Mary Elizabeth Braddon. Temple Bar was founded a year after the first publication of William Thackeray's The Cornhill Magazine, by one of Charles Dickens' followers, Sala, who promised his readers that the periodical would be "full of solid yet entertaining matter, that shall be interesting to Englishmen and Englishwomen…and that Filia-familias may read with as much gratification as Pater or Mater-familias", appealing to a solid, literate middle-class. It sold for about one shilling, and was one of the leading literary magazines of the era. 553 issues were published – up to 1906, about one a month. It published work by writers such as Amy Levy, Jane Austen, Wilkie Collins, Charles Reade, Robert Louis Stevenson, Anthony Trollope, Arthur Conan Doyle, E. F. Benson and Jessie Fothergill. Initially the magazine achieved a circulation of some 30,000 which eventually settled at around the 13,000 mark in the late 1860s. In 1868 Bentley's Magazine was merged into it. By 1896 it had dropped to about 8,000.
Price: $30.00




