1864 in literature explained
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1864.—Opening of Our Mutual Friend
Events
- January – Anthony Trollope's Can You Forgive Her?, the first of his Palliser novels, begins to appear in monthly parts in London. Trollope completes it on April 28 and the first volume is published as a book in September by Chapman & Hall. In April, The Small House at Allington concludes publication in the Cornhill Magazine and is published in book form by George Smith.
- January 2–April 16 – James Payn publishes his most popular story, Lost Sir Massingberd, in Chambers's Journal.[1] He follows it in the magazine (August 6 – December 24) by Married Beneath Him.
- February 20 – Painter George Frederic Watts marries his 16-year-old model, the actress Ellen Terry, 30 years his junior, in London. She elopes less than a year later.[2]
- March (dated January–February) – The first issue of the Russian literary magazine Epoch («Эпо́ха»), edited by Fyodor Dostoyevsky and his brother Mikhail (died July 22), is published in Saint Petersburg. This and the March and April issues contain the first publication of Fyodor's existential novella Notes from Underground («Записки из подполья», Zapiski iz podpol'ya).
- April 10 – Publisher William Ticknor dies of pneumonia in Philadelphia while on a trip with Nathaniel Hawthorne for the sake of the latter's health.
- April 23 – The Deutsche Shakespeare-Gesellschaft (German Shakespeare Society) is founded[3] as the first scientific and cultural association of its type in Weimar, and one of the world's oldest continuing literary societies.
- April – Charles Baudelaire leaves Paris for Belgium in the hope of resolving his financial difficulties.
- May 26 – Alexandre Dumas, fils marries Nadejda Naryschkine. His father, Alexandre Dumas, père, returns to Paris from Italy.
- May – The first Lithuanian press ban is imposed in the Russian Empire.
- June 19 – Henrik Ibsen arrives in Rome in a self-imposed exile from Norway that will last for 27 years.
- June 27 – Ambrose Bierce is wounded at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain.
- July 2 – The Female Detective is published under the pseudonym "Andrew Forrester, Junior" in London, presenting the first female professional detective in fiction. Around December, she is followed by Mrs Paschal in Revelations of a Lady Detective, published anonymously by William Stephens Hayward. R. D. Blackmore's first published work of fiction, the sensation novel Clara Vaughan, also issued anonymously this year in England, has a heroine solving a mystery.
- September – A debate at the Royal Geographical Society between Richard Francis Burton and John Hanning Speke is prevented by Speke's suicide (or accidental shooting).
- November 10 – The poet and critic John Addington Symonds the younger marries Janet Catherine North.
- November 25 – The brothers Edwin Booth (playing Brutus), John Wilkes Booth (who carries out the assassination of Abraham Lincoln the following year, playing Mark Antony) and Junius Brutus Booth, Jr. (playing Cassius) make their only appearance onstage together, in a performance of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar (in the year of the playwright's birth tricentennial) at the Winter Garden Theater in New York City, staged to raise funds for a memorial to William Shakespeare in the city's Central Park.
- December – Sheridan Le Fanu's Gothic locked room mystery-thriller Uncle Silas completes its serialisation in his Dublin University Magazine as "Maud Ruthyn and Uncle Silas" and is published as a three-volume novel by Richard Bentley in London.[4]
- unknown date – The English former chess master Howard Staunton publishes a facsimile of the 1600 quarto text of Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, the first use of photolithography for such a book.[5]
New books
Fiction
Children and young people
Drama
Poetry
Non-fiction
Births
- January 24 – Marguerite Durand, French actress, journalist and feminist leader (died 1936)[8]
- February 14 – Israel Zangwill, English novelist, playwright and Zionist (died 1926)
- February 21 – Leonard Merrick, English novelist (died 1939)
- February 26 – Antonín Sova, Czech poet and librarian (died 1928)
- April 8 – J. Smeaton Chase, English-born American author and photographer (died 1923)
- April 21 – Max Weber, German sociologist (died 1920)
- May 11 – Ethel Lilian Voynich, née Boole, Anglo-Irish novelist and composer (died 1960)
- July 20 – Erik Axel Karlfeldt, Nobel Prize-winning Swedish writer (died 1931)
- September 22 – Lodewijk van Deyssel (Karel Joan Lodewijk Alberdingk Thijm), Dutch novelist (died 1952)
- September 28 – Barry Pain, English poet and fiction writer (died 1928)
- September 29 – Miguel de Unamuno, Basque Spanish writer (died 1936)[9]
- October 1 – Emma Sheridan Fry, American actor, playwright, and drama teacher (died 1936)
- October 14 – Stefan Żeromski, Polish novelist, poet and dramatist (died 1925)
- October 21 – Mary Tracy Earle, American author and essayist (died 1955)
- November 11
- November 26 – Herman Gorter, Dutch poet and socialist (died 1927)
- November 28 – James Allen, English self-help writer and poet (died 1912)
- December 12 – Paul Elmer More, American critic and essayist (died 1937)
Deaths
- January 16 – Anton Felix Schindler, Austrian biographer of Beethoven (born 1795)
- January 29
- February 2 – Adelaide Anne Procter, English poet (born 1825)[11]
- March 16 – Robert Smith Surtees, English novelist and sporting writer (born 1805)
- May 19 – Nathaniel Hawthorne, American novelist (born 1804)
- May 20 – John Clare, English poet (born 1793)
- May 26 – Charles Sealsfield, Austro-American novelist and journalist (born 1793)
- July 4 – Thomas Colley Grattan, Irish miscellanist and novelist (born 1792)
- August 6 – Catherine Sinclair, Scottish novelist and children's writer (born 1800)
- August 7 – Janez Puhar, Slovene poet (born 1814)
- September 17 – Walter Savage Landor, English writer and poet (born 1775)
- November 3 – Gonçalves Dias, Brazilian poet and playwright (shipwreck, born 1823)
- December 6 – Simonas Daukantas, Lithuanian ethnographer and historian (born 1793)
Awards
Notes and References
- Book: Leavis, Q. D. . Q. D. Leavis
. Q. D. Leavis . Fiction and the Reading Public . 2nd . London . Chatto & Windus . 1965.
- Book: Shearer, Moira . Moira Shearer
. Moira Shearer . Ellen Terry . Stroud . Sutton Publishing . 1998 . Pocket biographies . 0750915269.
- Web site: Deutsche Shakespeare-Gesellschaft . Shakespeare-gesellschaft.de . 2014-07-09 . German . https://web.archive.org/web/20140714225621/http://shakespeare-gesellschaft.de/en.html . 2014-07-14 . dead .
- Book: McCormack, W. J. . 1997 . Sheridan Le Fanu . Stroud . Sutton Publishing . 3rd . 0-7509-1489-0.
- Book: Andrew Murphy. Shakespeare in Print: A History and Chronology of Shakespeare Publishing. 13 November 2003. Cambridge University Press. 978-1-139-43946-6. 358.
- Beum . Robert . 1907 . Ultra-Royalism Revisited: An Annotated Bibliography. Modern Age . 39 . 3 . 311–312.
- Book: Lease, Benjamin . University of Chicago Press . 0-226-46969-7 . That Wild Fellow John Neal and the American Literary Revolution . Chicago, Illinois . 1972 . 206.
- Book: Sue Helder Goliber. The Life and Times of Marguerite Durand: A Study in French Feminism. 1975. Kent State University. 1.
- [Joxe Azurmendi|Azurmendi, Joxe]
- Turzynski, Linda J. (1996). "Lucy Aikin." Dictionary of Literary Biography: British Children's Writers, 1800–1880. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Inc.
- Book: John Camden-Hotten. Charles Dickens: The Story of His Life. December 2001. The Minerva Group, Inc.. 978-0-89875-632-6. 86.