The Anglo-Saxon Review was a quarterly miscellany edited by Lady Randolph Churchill, and published in London by John Lane.
He suggested that the magazine take as its purpose "to preserve a permanent record of the thoughts and aspirations of our times, which vary as swiftly as light changes on running water, for wiser ages yet unborn."
For example, the first volume was bound with a copy of the binding by an unknown craftsman of James VI and I's book of the famous Vrais portraits de la vie des hommes illustres by André Thevet Paris 1584, which bears the arms and initials of James.
A fictional account of the magazine's creation is provided by Robin Paige in the novel Death at Whitechapel.
This article about a literary magazine published in the United Kingdom is a stub.