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thumb | 220x124px | right | Heinrich Heine’s Romanzero

This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1851.

Events

  • January 1 – The Caucasian Georgian theatre company gives its first performance, under the direction of Giorgi Eristavi.
  • June 5 – Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin begins serialization in the American abolitionist weekly The National Era.
  • June – While waiting to cross the English Channel on his honeymoon, Matthew Arnold probably begins to compose the poem "Dover Beach".
  • September 29 – Marian Evans, the future George Eliot, takes up an appointment as (assistant) editor of the Westminster Review, published by John Chapman. In this capacity she will meet G. H. Lewes.
  • November 14 – Herman Melville's novel Moby-Dick; or, The Whale is published in full, in a single volume, for the first time, by Harper & Brothers in New York, having been previously issued on October 18 as The Whale in an abridged three-volume edition by Richard Bentley in London.
  • December 2 – The French coup d'état of 1851 prompts Victor Hugo to be a leader of an unsuccessful insurrection against it. He is forced into exile, initially to Brussels.
  • December 24 – A fire at the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., destroys 35,000 books, about two–thirds of the collection.
  • unknown dates
  • Akabi's Story (Akabi Hikayesi), by Vartan Pasha, is published - an early example of a novel in the Turkish language printed in the Armenian alphabet
  • Hovhannes Hisarian publishes Khosrov yev Makruhi (Khosrov and Makruhi), the first romantic novel in the Armenian language, written in the vernacular Ashkharhabar dialect.
  • Stephanos Th. Xenos publishes his "Istanbul novel" The Devil in Turkey; Or Scenes in Constantinople in English translated from his Greek manuscript, in London.
  • Philosopher Auguste Comte includes a list of 150 books which a well-educated person should have read in his Catéchisme positiviste .
  • Albertus Willem Sijthoff establishes a publishing business at Leiden.

New books

Fiction

  • Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly – Une Vieille Maîtresse (An Old Mistress)
  • George Borrow – Lavengro: The Scholar, the Gypsy and the Priest (novelized memoir of Romany life)
  • Mathilde Fibiger – Clara Raphael, Tolv Breve (Clara Raphael, Twelve Letters)
  • Elizabeth Gaskell – Cranford (serialization begins)
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne – The House of the Seven Gables
  • Gottfried Keller – Der Grüne Heinrich
  • Sheridan Le Fanu
  • Ghost Stories and Tales of Mystery
  • The Watcher
  • Eliza Lynn Linton – Realities
  • Herman Melville – Moby-Dick
  • John Ruskin – The King of the Golden River
  • Jules Verne – A Drama in Mexico (Un drame au Mexique) short story
  • Harriet Ward – Jasper Lyle: A Tale of Kafirland [sic]

Children and young people

  • W. H. G. Kingston – Peter the Whaler

Drama

  • Edward Bulwer-Lytton – Not So Bad as We Seem
  • Ferdinand Dugué – Salvator Rosa
  • Franz Grillparzer – The Jewess of Toledo (Die Jüdin von Toledo, written)
  • Eugène Marin Labiche with Marc Michel – Un Chapeau de paille d'Italie (An Italian Straw Hat)
  • Maria Ann Lovell – Ingomar the Barbarian
  • Alexey Pisemsky – The Hypochondriac (published)
  • Eugène Scribe – Bataille de Dames

Poetry

  • Matthew Arnold – "Dover Beach" (probably completed; not published until 1867)
  • Heinrich Heine – Romanzero
  • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow – The Golden Legend

Non-fiction

  • Hans Christian Andersen – In Sweden
  • Gilbert Abbott à Beckett – The Comic History of Rome
  • Edward Creasy – The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World
  • Catherine Dickens (as Lady Maria Clutterbuck) – What Shall We Have for Dinner?
  • Josiah Henson – The Life of Josiah Henson, Formerly a Slave, Now an Inhabitant of Canada, as Narrated by Himself
  • Søren Kierkegaard
  • For Self-Examination
  • On my Work as an Author
  • Henry Mayhew – London Labour and the London Poor (collected in book form)
  • Francisco de Paula Mellado – Enciclopedia moderna
  • John Henry Newman – Lectures on the Present Position of Catholics in England.
  • Ferencz Aurelius Pulszky – A magyar jakobinusok (The Jacobins in Hungary)
  • John Ruskin – The Stones of Venice, vol 1
  • Herbert Spencer – Social Statics

Births

  • February 21 – Ernst von Hesse-Wartegg, Austrian writer and traveler (died 1918)
  • April 13 – Helen M. Winslow, American editor, author and publisher (died 1938)
  • May 27 – Henry Festing Jones, English biographer, editor and lawyer (died 1928)
  • June – Jessie Fothergill, English novelist (died 1891)
  • June 11 – Mary Augusta Ward (Mrs. Humphry Ward), Tasmanian-born English novelist (died 1920)
  • June 29 – Jane Dieulafoy, French archeologist, novelist and journalist (died 1916)
  • August 23 – Alois Jirásek, Czech novelist and playwright (died 1930)
  • September 14 – H. E. Beunke, Dutch writer (died 1925)
  • September 16 – Emilia Pardo Bazán, Galician Spanish novelist (died 1921)
  • December 10 – Melvil Dewey, born Melville Dewey, American librarian (died 1931)

Deaths

  • February 1 – Mary Shelley, English novelist and essayist (born 1797)
  • February 23 – Joanna Baillie, Scottish poet and dramatist (born 1762)
  • February 24 – Sake Dean Mahomed, author of first book in English by an Indian (born 1759)
  • May 23 – Richard Lalor Sheil, Irish dramatist and journalist (born 1791)
  • July 17 – Esther Copley, English children's writer and tractarian (born 1786)
  • August 1 – Harriet Lee, English novelist (born 1757)
  • August 10 – Heinrich Paulus, German theologian (born 1761)
  • September 14 – James Fenimore Cooper, American historical novelist (born 1789)
  • September 22 – Sarah Elizabeth Utterson, English translator and short story writer (born 1781)
  • December 19 – Henry Luttrell, English politician, wit and society poet (born c. 1765)
  • unknown date – Vanchinbalyn Gularans, Mongolian poet (unknown year of birth)

References