Harman Patil (Editor)

1816 in literature

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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications of 1816.

Contents

Events

  • April – Lord Byron leaves England for good to tour continental Europe.
  • April 14Lord Byron's poems "A Sketch from Private Life" and "Fare Thee Well", concerning his separation from his wife Anne Isabella, are published without authority in The Champion.
  • May – Lady Caroline Lamb's novel Glenarvon is published in London, a roman à clef containing an unflattering portrait of her ex-lover Lord Byron in the rakish title character of Lord Ruthven.
  • July – Lord Byron, Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Polidori, gathered at the Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva in a rainy Switzerland in this 'Year Without a Summer', tell each other tales. This gives rise to two classic Gothic narratives, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Polidori's The Vampyre (based on Byron's "Fragment of a Novel"). Byron also writes the poem Darkness. In late August Shelley and Godwin return to England, taking with them some of Byron's manuscripts for his publisher.
  • September 16
  • Lord Byron's Monody on the Death of the Right Honourable R. B. Sheridan, written at the request of Douglas Kinnaird, is spoken at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London by Mrs. Maria Davison.
  • Actor William Macready makes his London debut, at Covent Garden as Orestes in The Distressed Mother, a translation of Racine's Andromaque by Ambrose Philips.
  • October
  • Charles Wentworth Dilke and his friend Charles Armitage Brown take up residence at Wentworth Place in Hampstead, on the northern edge of London.
  • John Keats writes his sonnet "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer".
  • November 25 – The Chestnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia (United States) becomes the world's first to be illuminated by gas lighting.
  • December – John Keats composes the poem "Sleep and Poetry" while staying at the Hampstead house of his friend Leigh Hunt, who introduces him to Shelley.
  • December 5 – Lord Byron's The Prisoner of Chillon, and Other Poems is published in London; John Murray, his publisher, is able to sell 7,000 copies of both this and Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto III (published November 18) to booksellers at a dinner this month.
  • December 30Percy Bysshe Shelley marries his mistress Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin in London following the suicides on October 9 of her half-sister, Fanny Imlay (by laudanum in Swansea), and on December 10 of his pregnant estranged first wife, Harriet (by drowning in The Serpentine).
  • Publication in Mexico of José Joaquín Fernández de Lizardi's comic picaresque novel The Mangy Parrot: The Life and Times of Periquillo Sarniento written by himself for his children (El Periquillo Sarniento) in installments, generally considered the first novel written and published in Latin America, though due to government censorship the concluding chapters are not published until the 1830s.
  • Shakespeare's tragedy Hamlet is for the first time performed at the castle of Kronborg in Helsingør (Elsinore, Denmark) where it is set.
  • Fiction

  • Thomas AsheThe Soldier of Fortune
  • Sarah BurneyTales of Fancy: The Shipwreck
  • Benjamin ConstantAdolphe
  • Selina DavenportThe Original of the Miniature
  • Stéphanie Félicité, Comtesse de Genlis – Jane of France
  • Jane HarveyBrougham Castle
  • Ann HattonChronicles of an Illustrious House
  • Barbara HoflandThe Maid of Moscow
  • Leigh Hunt – The Story of Rimini
  • Frances Margaretta Jacson (wrongly ascribed to Mary Brunton) – Rhoda
  • Henry Gally KnightIlderim, a Syrian Tale
  • Caroline Lamb – Glenarvon
  • Agnes Lancaster – The Abbess of Valtiera
  • José Joaquín Fernández de LizardiThe Mangy Parrot
  • Emma ParkerSelf-deception
  • David William PaynterGodfrey Ranger
  • Henrietta Roviere – Craig-Melrose Priory
  • Walter Scott
  • The Antiquary
  • The Black Dwarf
  • Old Mortality
  • Ann Sullivan – Owen Castle
  • Sophia F. Ziegenhirt – The Orphan of Tintern Abbey
  • Children

  • François Guillaume Ducray-DuminilJean et Jeannette, ou les Petits aventuriers parisiens (Jean and Jeanette, or Two Little Adventurers in Paris)
  • E. T. A. Hoffmann – Nussknacker und Mausekönig (The Nutcracker and the Mouse King, basis of ballet The Nutcracker)
  • Drama

  • Samuel Taylor ColeridgeZapolya
  • Bernhard Severin IngemannReinald Underbarnet ("The Miraculous Child Reinald")
  • Charles MaturinBertram; or The Castle of St. Aldobrand
  • Poetry

  • Lord Byron
  • Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto III
  • The Siege of Corinth
  • Prometheus
  • Samuel Taylor ColeridgeKubla Khan (written in 1797)
  • John Keats – "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer"
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • Alastor, or The Spirit of Solitude
  • Mont Blanc
  • Non-fiction

  • Samuel Taylor Coleridge – The Statesman's Manual; or, The Bible the best guide to political skill and foresight: a lay sermon
  • John HoylandA Historical Survey of the Customs, Habits, and Present State of the Gypsies
  • Nikolay KaramzinHistory of the Russian State (История государства Российского, Istoriya gosudarstva Rossiyskogo; publication begins)
  • George SinclairHortus gramineus Woburnensis
  • Births

  • February 18 – Ferdinand Dugué, French poet and playwright (died 1913)
  • March 1Kawatake Mokuami (河竹黙阿弥), Japanese kabuki dramatist (died 1893)
  • April 1 – Peter Cunningham, British literary scholar and antiquarian (died 1869)
  • April 21 – Charlotte Brontë, English novelist and poet (died 1855)
  • June 2Grace Aguilar, English novelist (died 1847)
  • September 16Theodore Martin, Scottish poet, biographer and translator (died 1909)
  • September 20Fredrik August Dahlgren, Swedish dramatist and songwriter (died 1895)
  • November 1Friedrich Wilhelm Hackländer, German novelist, dramatist and travel writer (died 1877)
  • November 28Theodosia Trollope (Theodosia Garrow), English poet and translator (died 1865)
  • Deaths

  • February 22Adam Ferguson, Scottish philosopher (born 1723)
  • March 3Johann August von Starck, German writer and theologian (born 1741
  • April 28Johann Heinrich Abicht, German philosopher (born 1762)
  • July 7Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Irish playwright and politician (born 1751)
  • July 23Elizabeth Hamilton, Irish-born Scottish essayist, poet and novelist (born c. 1756)
  • September 9Eliza Fay, English letter-writer and traveler (born 1755 or 1756)
  • October 27Santō Kyōden (real name Iwase Samuru), Japanese fiction writer, poet and artist (born 1761)
  • References

    1816 in literature Wikipedia


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