The Bibelot (1895–1923) was founded by Thomas Mosher of Portland, Maine and its aim, as stated by Kirsten MacLeod, was to “provide beautiful print material at an affordable price, to demonstrate, as he said in his manifesto for the first number, ‘that choice typography and inexpensiveness need not lie far apart'” (American Little Magazines of the Fin de Siecle: Art, Protest, and Cultural Transformation [U of Toronto: 2018], 125). MacLeod notes that the publication “as its subtitle indicates, was a ‘reprint of poetry and prose for book lovers, chosen in part from scarce editions and sources not generally known’ (qtd. in 126) and that “circulation never exceeded 4,000.” When first launched, the Bibelot cost five cents per issue or fifty cents annually “later increasing to ten cents, a dollar a year” (MacLeod 125).
B. Meredith Langstaff lists dozens of page numbers without titles in his typescript list of works by or related to Andrew Lang. If I was able to find a copy of the Bibelot on Internet Archive, I often added the title of Lang’s poem or essay to the list below (along with a link).
Vol. 1 (1895): pp. 194, 219, 223, 225, 226, 228, 229, 230, 231, 233, 235, 236, 237, 239, 240, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246
Vol. 2 (1896): 8, 28, 31, 300, 328
Vol. 3 (1897): 14–24 (“Idyl II: The Sorceress”), 39 “Idyl XIX”), 43 “Bion”, 56 “Idyl II: The Love of Achilles”, 63–64 (“Moschus”) , 65–72 “The Lament for Bion”, 345 (“Odysseus in Phaeacia”)
Vol. 4 (1898): 320 (From “Letters to Dead Authors.”)
Vol. 5 (1899): 207 (“Translations from the French of Francois Villon“)
Vol. 7 (1901): 43 (“Gérard De Nerval”), (“El Desdichado” 44)
Vol. 9 (1903): “Lyrics by Andrew Lang.” pp. 217–46.
Vol. 13 (1907): 257
Vol. 16 (1910): “How to Fail in Literature” (July) (pp. 251–99), “Does Ridicule Kill?” (Aug.) (pp. 301–310). (BML)
You may also see volume six (1900), volume 8 (1902), volume 10 (1904), volume 11 (1905), and volume 15 (1909) at the Internet Archive site (and, perhaps, find other volumes with dedicated clicking).