London Mercury
The London Mercury was the name of several periodicals published in London from the 17th to the 20th centuries. The earliest was a newspaper that appeared during the Exclusion Bill crisis; it lasted only 56 issues (1682).[1] (Earlier periodicals had employed similar names: Mercurius Politicus, 1659; The Impartial Protestant Mercury, 1681.) Successor periodicals published as The London Mercury during the 18th and 19th centuries.
In the 20th century, The London Mercury was the major monthly literary journal that published from 1919 to 1939. J. C. Squire served as editor from November 1919 to September 1934;[2] Rolfe Arnold Scott-James succeeded Squire as editor from October 1934 to April 1939. The monthly published a wide variety of serious contemporary literature, including poetry by Robert Frost, Robert Graves, Richmond Lattimore,[3] Siegfried Sassoon, Conrad Aiken, Hilaire Belloc, and William Butler Yeats, among many others.[4] The London Mercury also carried short fiction by several well-known authors, including Katherine Mansfield, J. B. Priestley, John Betjeman, Margaret Irwin, Gerald Bullett, Henry Williamson and Karel Čapek,[5] and published literary criticism by W. J. Turner, John Freeman and Edward Shanks.[2] The London Mercury took a conservative political position.[2]
In 2002 the London Mercury title was adopted by an online newspaper.[6]
References
- ↑ https://web.archive.org/web/20070102100321/http://rarenewspapers.com/viewissue.aspx?ID=120453. Archived from the original on January 2, 2007. Retrieved April 13, 2007. Missing or empty
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(help) - 1 2 3 Joy Grant, Harold Monro and the Poetry Bookshop. University of California Press, 1967 (pp. 132-133).
- ↑ Richmond Lattimore, "Letter to Caesar." London Mercury 31:349-54
- ↑ Sir Henry Newbolt, ed., The Mercury Book of Verse, London, Macmillan, 1931.
- ↑ "Contents", in The Second Mercury Story Book. London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1931.
- ↑ "About London Mercury". London Mercury - Midwest Radio Network Pty Ltd. Retrieved 10 March 2014.