Loane edited and wrote a number of books, mostly for use in schools. His Longer Narrative Poems of the Nineteenth Century (1897) and A Short Handbook of Literary Terms (1900) both had multiple editions.[5]
On 27 December 1900, Loane married Edith Armitage, a daughter of the Rev. William Firth Armitage, vicar of Scotforth, Lancashire, at Scotforth.[6][2] Their daughter Alice Margaret was born at Fulham in 1902,[7] and another daughter, Joan Edith, in 1904.[8] After retiring from St Paul's, Loane settled in Stroud, Gloucestershire, where he died in 1945.[9] Joan Edith married Francis Wood Smith at St George's, Hanover Square in 1933.[10]
Selected publications
George Green Loane, ed., Longer Narrative Poems of the Nineteenth Century (1897, several editions)
George Green Loane, A Short Handbook of Literary Terms (1900, a further 14 editions until 1976)
George Green Loane, ed., Livy: Book XXI, with Introduction, Notes &c (Blackie, reprinted 1986)
George Green Loane, ed., Selected English Essays (London: Dent, The Kings Treasuries of Literature series, 1921)
George G. Loane, M.A., Longer Narrative Poems (18th Century) edited for Schools (1921)
George Green Loane, A Book of Story Poems (University of California Libraries, 1921)
George Green Loane More English essays (1928, new edition 1941)
George Green Loane, Echoes in Tennyson, and Other Essays (London: Stockwell, 1928)
George G. Loane, "Chapman's Homer", The Cornhill Magazine, vol. 156 (1937), pp. 637–640
George G. Loane, "Misprints in Chapman's Homer", Notes and Queries 173 (1937), pp. 398–402