Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

1811 in poetry

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Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).

Contents

Events

  • March 25 — The University of Oxford expels the first-year undergraduate Percy Bysshe Shelley after he and Thomas Jefferson Hogg refuse to answer questions about The Necessity of Atheism, a pamphlet they published anonymously. Earlier this year, Shelley, as "A Gentleman of the University of Oxford", published in London Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things, containing a 172-line anti-monarchical and anti-war poem dedicated to Harriet Westbrook, a work subsequently lost until 2006.
  • November 21 — German poet Heinrich von Kleist shoots his terminally-ill lover Henriette Vogel and then himself, on the shore of the Kleiner Wannsee near Potsdam.
  • Lord Byron

  • July 14–17 — Lord Byron arrives in London after an absence from England of a little more than two years on his Continental tour.
  • October 16 — Byron receives a challenge from the poet Thomas Moore who had been offended by parts of English Bards.
  • November 4 — Byron meets Thomas Campbell and Moore at the home of Samuel Rogers, where the company discusses literary topics.
  • United Kingdom

  • Robert Bloomfield, 'The Banks of Wye
  • Richard Cumberland, Retrospection
  • Charles Lamb, Prince Dorus; or, Flattery Put Out of Countenance, published anonymously; for children
  • Mary Russell Mitford, Christina, the Maid of the South Seas
  • William Peebles, Burnomania: the celebrity of Robert Burns considered in a Discourse addressed to all real Christians of every Denomination
  • Anna Maria Porter, Ballad Romances, and Other Poems
  • Sir Walter Scott, The Vision of Don Roderick
  • Mary Tighe, Psyche, with Other Poems
  • John Wolcot, Carlton House Fete; or, The Disappointed Bard
  • United States

  • Hugh Henry Brackenridge, An Epistle to Walter Scott, Pittsburgh: Franklin Head Printing-office
  • William Cullen Bryant, Thanatopsis
  • John Cole, editor, The Minstrel: A Collection of Celebrated Songs Set to Music
  • Sumner Lincoln Fairfield, The Poems and Prose Writings of Sumner Lincoln Fairfield, two volumes, Philadelphia: Printed for the Proprietor
  • Susanna Haswell Rowson, editor, A Present For Young Ladies; Containing Poems, Dialogues, Addresses, &c. &c. &c, As Recited by the Pupils of Mrs. Rowson's Academy, at the Annual Exhibitions, (Boston: Published by John West & Co.
  • Samuel Woodworth, 1785-1842 [1811], Beasts at Law, or Zoologian Jurisprudence; A Poem, Satirical, Allegorical, and Moral, In Three Cantos, Translated from the Arabic of Sampfilius Philoerin, Z. Y. X. W. &c. &c. Whose Fables Have Made So Much Noise in the East, and Whose Fame Has Eclipsed That of Aesop. With Notes and Annotations New York: J. Harmer & Co.
  • Other

  • Bernhard Severin Ingemann, Digte ("Poems"), Denmark
  • Births

    Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:

  • February 1 – Arthur Hallam (died 1833), English poet, best known as the subject of In Memoriam A.H.H. a long poem by his best friend, Alfred, Lord Tennyson
  • October 19 – Andreas Munch (died 1884), Norwegian poet
  • date not known – Andreas Laskaratos Ανδρέας Λασκαράτος (died 1901), Greek satirical poet and writer
  • Deaths

    Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:

  • January 8 - Christoph Friedrich Nicolai (born 1733), German writer, publisher, critic, author of satirical novels, regional historian, and a key figure of the Enlightenment in Berlin
  • September 14 - James Grahame (born 1765), Scottish poet, lawyer and clergyman
  • John Leyden
  • Dositej Obradović (born 1742), Serbian author, philosopher, linguist, polyglot and the first minister of education of Serbia
  • Robert Treat Paine, Jr., (born 1773), American poet and editor; son of Robert Treat Paine, signer of the Declaration of Independence
  • Thomas Percy (born 1729), English clergyman, bishop and poet
  • References

    1811 in poetry Wikipedia