Francis Turner Palgrave (28 September 1824 - 24 October 1897)  was a British critic and  poet. 
He was born at Great Yarmouth, the eldest son of Sir Francis Palgrave, the historian  and his wife Elizabeth Turner, daughter of the banker Dawson  Turner. His brothers were William Gifford Palgrave, Inglis Palgrave and Reginald Palgrave. His childhood was spent at Yarmouth and  at his father's house in Hampstead.  At fourteen he was sent as a day-boy to Charterhouse; and in 1843, having in the  meanwhile travelled extensively in Italy and other parts of the  continent, he won a scholarship at Balliol College, Oxford. In 1846 he  interrupted his university career to serve as assistant private  secretary to Gladstone, but returned, to Oxford  the next year, and took a first class in Literae Humaniores. From 1847 to 1862 he was fellow of Exeter College, and in 1849 entered  the Education Department at Whitehall.  In 1850 he accepted the vice-principalship of Kneller Hall Training  College at Twickenham. There he came into contact with Alfred Tennyson, and laid the  foundation of a lifelong friendship.
 When the training college was abandoned, Palgrave returned to  Whitehall in 1855, becoming examiner in the Education Department, and  eventually assistant secretary. He married, in 1862, Cecil Grenville  Milnes, daughter of James Milnes-Gaskell. In 1884 he resigned his  position at the Education Department, and in the following year  succeeded John Campbell Shairp as professor of  poetry at Oxford. He died in London,  and was buried in the cemetery on Barnes Common.
 There was a minor scandal in 1862 when Palgrave was commissioned to  write a catalogue for the 1862 International Exhibition,  in which he praised his friend the sculptor Thomas Woolner and denigrated other sculptors, especially  Woolner's main rival Carlo Marochetti. The well known controversialist Jacob Omnium pointed out in a series of letters to  the press that the two lived together. William Holman Hunt wrote a reply supporting Palgrave  and Woolner,  but Palgrave was forced to withdraw the catalogue.
 Palgrave published both criticism and poetry, but his work as a  critic was by far the more important. His Visions of England  (1880–1881) has dignity and lucidity, but little of the "natural magic"  which the greatest of his predecessors in the Oxford chair considered  rightly to be the test of inspiration. His last volume of poetry, Amenophis,  appeared in 1892. His criticism is considered to demonstrate fine and  sensitive tact, quick intuitive perception, and generally sound  judgment. His Handbook to the Fine Arts Collection, International  Exhibition, 1862, and his Essays on Art (1866), though  flawed, were full of striking judgments strikingly expressed.
 His Landscape in Poetry (1897) showed wide knowledge and  critical appreciation of one of the most attractive aspects of poetic  interpretation. But Palgrave's principal contribution to the development  of literary taste was contained in his Golden Treasury of English Songs and  Lyrics (1861), an anthology of the best poetry in the language  constructed upon a plan sound and spacious, and followed out with a  delicacy of feeling which could scarcely be surpassed. Palgrave followed  it with a Treasury of Sacred Song (1889), and a second series of  the Golden Treasury (1897), including the work of later poets,  but in neither of these was quite the same exquisiteness of judgment  preserved. Among his other works were The Passionate Pilgrim  (1858), a volume of selections from Robert Herrick entitled Chrysomela  (1877), a memoir of Arthur Hugh Clough (1862) and a critical essay on Sir Walter  Scott (1866) prefixed to an edition of his poems. He published a  small collection of hymns in 1867 which ran to three editions, each  slightly enlarged.