- Source: 1833 in poetry
Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).
Events
June – Rev. John Henry Newman writes "The Pillar of Cloud" (Lead, Kindly Light) on a boat in the Strait of Bonifacio.
15 September – English poet Arthur Henry Hallam, a friend of Tennyson (and fiancé of his sister Emily), dies suddenly of a brain haemorrhage in Vienna aged 22. This year in his memory Tennyson writes "Ulysses" (completed 20 October; published in Poems of 1842), Tithon (an early version of "Tithonus") and "The Two Voices" (originally entitled "Thoughts of a Suicide") and begins "Morte d'Arthur" (published 1842) and "Tiresias" (published 1885). In 1850 he will publish In Memoriam A.H.H.
Works published
= United Kingdom
=Elizabeth Barrett (later Elizabeth Barrett Browning), anonymously published translation from the Ancient Greek of Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound
Edward Bickersteth, Christian Psalmody
Caroline Bowles (later Caroline Anne Southey), Tales of the Factories
Robert Browning, Pauline, a fragment of a confession, the author's first published poem, published anonymously, sells no copies (first reprinted in Poetical Works 1868 with minor revisions and an "apologetic preface")
Agnes Bulmer, Messiah's Kingdom, epic poem running to 14,000 lines, considered the longest poem ever written by a woman
Hartley Coleridge, Poems
Allan Cunningham, The Maid of Elvar
Ebenezer Elliott, The Splendid Village; Corn Law Rhymes, and Other Poems
Felicia Dorothea Hemans, Hymns on the Works of Nature
John Stuart Mill, Thoughts on Poetry and its Variants (criticism)
Robert Montgomery, Woman: The Angel of Life
Sir Walter Scott (died 1832), The Poetical Works of Sir Walter Scott, Bart, the final revised edition, edited by J. G. Lockhart and illustrated by J. M. W. Turner; in 12 volumes, published starting in May of this year, with Volume I, and ending in April 1834, with Volume XII
Letitia Elizabeth Landon, writing under the pen name "L.E.L.", Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1834, including "The Zenana"
= United States
=Maria Gowen Brooks, Zophiel, highly emotional verse, influenced by her connections with the English Lake poets; Charles Lamb asserted she could not have been the author, "as if there could have been a woman capable of anything so grand"
Richard Henry Dana Sr., Poems and Prose Writings, a very well received book, including many of his better-known essays and poems, including "The Buccaneer" (see also the expanded edition 1850)
Maria James, "Ode on the Fourth of July 1833"
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, translator, Coplas de Don Jorge Manrique
Penina Moise, Fancy's Sketch Book, called the first poetry book published by a Jewish American in the United States; including humorous and satirical poems on love, poverty and death as well as comments on the suffering of Jews abroad, who are encouraged to immigrate to the United States
= Other
=M. J. Chapman, "Barbados" by a pro-slavery planter in Barbados
Marceline Desbordes-Valmore, Les Fleurs, France
Wilhelm Hey, Fünfzig Fabeln für Kinder ("Fifty Fables for Children")
Frederik Paludan-Muller, Dandserinden ("The Danseuse" or "Dancing Girl"), inspired by Lord Byron's poetry; an ironic poem in ottava rima; Denmark
France Prešeren, A Wreath of Sonnets (Slovene: Sonetni venec)
Alexander Pushkin, The Bronze Horseman (Russian, Медный всадник, literally "The Copper Horseman"), written, first published 1837
Pietro Zorutti (Pieri Çorut), Plovisine, Friulian
Births
Death years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
23 January – Lewis Morris (died 1907), Anglo-Welsh poet
5 May – Richard Watson Dixon (died 1900), English poet and clergyman
29 May – George Gordon McCrae (died 1927), Australian
24 August – Narmadashankar Dave, also known as "Narmad" (died 1886), Indian, Gujarati-language poet
8 October – Edmund Clarence Stedman (died 1908), American poet, critic, essayist, banker and scientist
19 October – Adam Lindsay Gordon, Azores-born Australian "national poet", jockey and politician
27 December – Larin Paraske (died 1904), Finnish Izhorian oral poet and rune-singer
Deaths
Birth years link to the corresponding "[year] in poetry" article:
4 February – John O'Keefe (born 1747), Irish poet, playwright and actor
14 April – Joseph-Isidore Bédard (born 1806), Canadian poet, lawyer and politician, dies in Paris (haemorrhage)
7 September – Hannah More (born 1745), English poet, playwright, religious writer and philanthropist
15 September – Arthur Hallam (born 1811), English poet in whose memory Alfred, Lord Tennyson later writes In Memoriam A.H.H., dies in Vienna (haemorrhage)
26 September – Robert Anderson (born 1770), English Cumbrian dialect poet
4 October – Maria Jane Jewsbury (Fletcher) (born 1800), English writer and poet, dies in India (cholera)
10 October – Thomas Atkinson (born 1801?), Scottish poet, bookseller and politician, dies at sea (consumption)
30 December – William Sotheby (born 1757), English poet and translator
Date not known – Kaviraja Bankidas Ashiya (born 1771), Rajasthani poet and scholar
See also
19th century in literature
19th century in poetry
Golden Age of Russian Poetry (1800–1850)
List of poetry awards
List of poets
List of years in literature
List of years in poetry
Poetry
Young Germany (Junges Deutschland) a loose group of German writers from about 1830 to 1850
Notes
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Majapahit
- Wilhelm Dilthey
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- Harmodios dan Aristogeiton
- John Stuart Mill
- Ossian
- Śatakatraya
- Taras Shevchenko
- Thomas Cole
- Ukiyo-e
- 1833 in poetry
- 1833 in literature
- 1833
- 1823 in literature
- List of years in poetry
- Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- Richard Watson Dixon
- Ulysses (poem)
- List of Russian-language poets
- Poems by Edgar Allan Poe