1879 in literature
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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1879.
Events
- January 1 – Benjamin Henry Blackwell opens the first Blackwell's bookshop in Oxford.[1]
- September 6 – First publication of a story by Arthur Conan Doyle, "The Mystery of Sasassa Valley" in Chambers's Journal.
- October 10 – American poet Ethel Lynn Beers' collected works All Quiet Along The Potomac and Other Poems (including her most well-known work "All Quiet Along the Potomac Tonight") are published; the following day she dies aged 52 at Orange, New Jersey.
- December 21 – Henrik Ibsen's controversial drama A Doll's House premières at the Royal Danish Theatre in Copenhagen (having been first published on December 4 in the city).
- Publication of the first complete edition of Georg Büchner's works as Georg Büchner's sämmtliche Werke, edited by Karl Emil Franzos, is completed in Frankfurt, including the first printing of the play Wozzeck, left unfinished on the writer's death in 1837.
- English critic and poet Theodore Watts-Dunton takes the alcoholic poet Algernon Charles Swinburne into his permanent care at Watts' Putney home.
- The Rabelais Club is founded in London, holding a literary dinner once every two months. High-profile members include novelists Henry James, Thomas Hardy, Bret Harte, and Oliver Wendell Holmes, Walter Besant, and George du Maurier.
- The Swiss publisher Birkhäuser is founded.
New books
Fiction
- W. Harrison Ainsworth – Beau Nash
- Mary Elizabeth Braddon
- The Cloven Foot
- Vixen
- Wilkie Collins
- The Fallen Leaves
- A Rogue's Life
- Alphonse Daudet – Kings in Exile
- Silas Hocking – Her Benny[2]
- Joris-Karl Huysmans – Les Soeurs Vatard
- Henry James – Daisy Miller
- Reinis and Matīss Kaudzīte – Mērnieku laiki ("Times of the Land-Surveyors"; first novel in Latvian)
- Charles Kickham – Knocknagow, or The Homes of Tipperary
- Pierre Loti – Aziyadé
- George Meredith – The Egoist
- John Boyle O'Reilly – Moondyne
- Samuel Vedanayagam Pillai – Prathapa Mudaliar Charithram ("The Life of Prathapa Mudaliar", written 1857; first novel in Tamil)
- August Strindberg – The Red Room (Roda Rummet)
- Anthony Trollope
- Cousin Henry
- The Duke's Children (serialization begins)
- John Caldigate
- Jules Verne
- The Begum's Fortune (Les Cinq cents millions de la Bégum)
- Tribulations of a Chinaman in China (Les Tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine)
- Friedrich Theodor Vischer – Auch einer: eine Reisebekanntschaft
Children and young people
- Louisa May Alcott – Jack and Jill: A Village Story
- E. W. Cole – Cole's Funny Picture Book
- Evelyn Whitaker – Laddie
Drama
We must come to a final settlement, Torvald. During eight whole years. . . we have never exchanged one serious word about serious things.
Nora, in Ibsen's A Doll's House (1879)
- Vasile Alecsandri – Despot-Vodă
- Émile Augier – Les Fourchambault
- Edmond Gondinet – Les Tapageurs
- James Herne – Hearts of Oak
- Henrik Ibsen – A Doll's House
- George Robert Sims – Crutch and Toothpick
Poetry
Main article: 1879 in poetry
- Ethel Lynn Beers – All Quiet Along The Potomac and Other Poems
- Kate Greenaway – Under the Window: Pictures & Rhymes for Children
Non-fiction
- Sir Edward Arnold – The Light of Asia
- Lewis Carroll – Euclid and his Modern Rivals
- Charles Darwin – The Life of Erasmus Darwin
- Gottlob Frege – Begriffsschrift (Concept Writing)
- Henry George – Progress and Poverty
- George Grove (ed.) – A Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 1st edition begins publication
- Yngvar Nielsen – Reisehaandbog over Norge (Travel Manual to Norway)
- Robert Louis Stevenson – Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes
Births
- January 1 – E. M. Forster, English novelist and critic (died 1970)
- January 26 – Alfred Eckhard Zimmern, German-born English historian and political scientist (died 1957)
- February 17 – Dorothy Canfield Fisher, American activist and novelist (died 1958)
- March 14 – Harold Monro, English poet and promoter of poetry (died 1932)
- April 14 – James Branch Cabell, American novelist (died 1958)
- May 8 – Ioan C. Filitti, Romanian historian, political theorist and essayist (died 1945)
- June 4 – Percy Lubbock, English essayist, critic and biographer (died 1965)
- July 19 – Ferenc Móra, Hungarian children's writer and editor (died 1934)
- July 20 – Claude Scudamore Jarvis, English writer, Arabist and naturalist (died 1953)
- September 19 – Louis Joseph Vance, American novelist (died 1933)
- October 2 – Wallace Stevens, American poet (died 1955)
- December 3 – Kafū Nagai (永井 荷風), Japanese novelist (died 1959)
- December 24 – Émile Nelligan, French Canadian poet (died 1941)
Deaths
- January 16 – Octave Crémazie, "the father of French Canadian poetry" (born 1827)
- February 28 – Hortense Allart, French feminist novelist (born 1801)
- March 3
- William Howitt, English historical writer and poet (born 1792)
- Annie Keary, English novelist, poet and children's writer (born 1825)
- March 9 – Mark Prager Lindo, Dutch historian (born 1819)
- March 19 – Claire Clairmont, English-born diarist and correspondent (born 1798)
- April 8 – Anthony Panizzi, Italian-born English librarian (born 1797)
- April 21 – George Hadfield, English radical author and politician (born 1787)
- April 25 – Charles Tennyson Turner, English poet (born 1808)
- April 30 – Sarah Josepha Hale, American novelist and poet (born 1788)
- June 19 – George W. M. Reynolds, English popular novelist (born 1814)
- July 4 – Sarah Dorsey, American novelist and historian (born 1829)
- July 30 – Aasmund Olavsson Vinje, Norwegian poet and journalist (born 1818)
- September 20 – Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon, Canadian novelist and poet (born 1829)
- September 23 – Francis Kilvert, English diarist and cleric (born 1840)
- October 11 – Ethel Lynn Beers, American poet (born 1827)
- October 13 – Henry Charles Carey, American economist (born 1793)
- October 28 – Marie Roch Louis Reybaud, French political economist (born 1799)
- October 31
- Jacob Abbott, American children's writer (born 1803)
- John Baldwin Buckstone, English dramatist (born 1802)
- December 27 – William Hepworth Dixon, English historian, traveller and journal editor (born 1821)
Awards
- Newdigate Prize – Thomas Mosse Macdonald[3]
References
- ↑ "Nos. 48–51: Blackwell's Bookshop". Broad Street, Oxford. 2008. Archived from the original on 2 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
- ↑ Leavis, Q. D. (1965). Fiction and the Reading Public (2nd ed.). London: Chatto & Windus.
- ↑ Iona: Newdigate Prize Poem, 1879
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