Time and Tide was a British weekly (and later monthly) political and literary review magazine founded by Margaret, Lady Rhondda, in 1920.
[3] Contributors included Nancy Astor, Vera Brittain,[2] John Brophy,[4] Anthony Cronin (literary editor of the magazine 1956–1958),[5] E. M. Delafield,[2] Crystal Eastman,[6] Leonora Eyles, Graham Greene,[4] Charlotte Haldane, Mary Hamilton,[2] J. M. Harvey,[7] Winifred Holtby, Cicely Hamilton, Octavia Wilberforce, Storm Jameson,[2] C. S. Lewis,[8] Wyndham Lewis,[9] Rose Macaulay, Naomi Mitchison,[2] Eric Newton,[10] George Orwell,[4] Elizabeth Robins,[2] George Bernard Shaw,[4] Helena Swanwick, Rebecca West, Ellen Wilkinson,[2] Charles Williams,[11] and Virginia Woolf.
[2] While there are no definite numbers confirming circulation of the magazine, in it's first year it sold between 5,000 and 10,000 copies per week with an estimated increase to between 12,000 and 15,000 in the 1920s and 30,000 during World War II.
His important articles included a review of the 'B' text of W. B. Yeats's A Vision (1937) and an exposition of his own Arthurian sequence of poems, Taliessin Through Logres (1938).
It was resurrected as a quarterly from 1984 to 1986,[13] edited from their global headquarters in London by Alexander Chancellor and propped up by a very wealthy peer, Lord Forte of Ripley.