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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1733.
Events
- February 20 – The first epistle of Alexander Pope's poem An Essay on Man is published anonymously.[1]
 - March 29 – The second epistle of Pope's An Essay on Man is published.[1]
 - May – Voltaire begins his long-term relationship with Emilie de Breteuil, marquise du Chatelet.
 - May 8 – The third epistle of Pope's An Essay on Man is published.[1]
 - Autumn – Laurence Sterne enters Jesus College, Cambridge.[2]
 - October – Charles Macklin makes his debut at Drury Lane Theatre in The Recruiting Officer.[3]
 
New books
Prose
- George Berkeley – The Theory of Vision
 - James Bramston – The Man of Taste (answer to Pope from 1732)
 - John Durant Breval (as Joseph Gay) – Morality in Vice (part of Curll's continuing war with John Gay)
 - Peter Browne – Things Supernatural and Divine Conceived by Analogy with things Natural and Human
 - George Cheyne – The English Malady
 - Thomas-Simon Gueullette – Les Mille et une Heures, contes péruviens (Peruvian Tales: Related in One Thousand and One Hours, by One of the Select Virgins of Cusco)
 - John Hervey, 2nd Baron Hervey – An Epistle from a Nobleman to a Doctor of Divinity
 - George Lyttelton, 1st Baron Lyttelton – Advice to a Lady
 - Samuel Madden – Memoirs of the Twentieth Century (roman à clef about George II)
 - David Mallet – Of Verbal Criticism (to Pope)
 - Thomas Newcomb – The Woman of Taste (reaction to Pope's Epistle of 1732)
 - Alexander Pope
- "Of the Nature and State of Man, with Respect to" (3) "Society" (continuation of Essay on Man; the first two "epistles" published in 1732, the fourth in 1744)
 - Of the Use of Riches: An Epistle to Lord Bathurst (also as Epistle to Bathurst)
 - The Impertinent
 
 - Elizabeth Singer Rowe – Letters Moral and Entertaining
 - Jonathan Swift
- On Poetry, a Rhapsody (contains explicit attacks on George II and many of the "dunces", resulting in arrests and prosecution.)
 - The Life and Genuine Character of Doctor Swift
 
 - Voltaire – Letters Concerning the English Nation
 - Isaac Watts – Philosophical Essays
 
Drama
- William Bond – The Tuscan Treaty
 - John Durant Breval – The Rape of Helen (printed 1737)
 - Charles Coffey – The Boarding School (performed and published)
 - Henry Fielding – The Miser (from Molière)
 - John Gay (died 1732) – Achilles (opera)
 - Eliza Haywood – The Opera of Operas (adaptation of Fielding's Tom Thumb, with a pro-Walpole "reconciliation" scene) (opera)
 - William Havard – Scanderbeg
 - John Kelly – Timon in Love
 - Edward Phillips
- The Livery Rake
 - The Mock Lawyer
 - The Stage Mutineers
 
 - António José da Silva – Vida do Grande Dom Quixote de la Mancha e do Gordo Sancho Pança
 - Lewis Theobald (ed.) – The Works of Shakespeare
 - Lewis Theobald – The Fatal Secret
 
Poetry
- Anonymous – Verses Address'd to the Imitator of the First Satire of the Second Book of Horace (attrib. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, to Pope)
 - John Banks – Poems on Several Occasions
 - Samuel Bowden – Poetical Essays
 - Mary Chandler – A Description of Bath
 - Thomas Fitzgerald – Poems
 - Matthew Green (as Peter Drake) – The Grotto
 - James Hammond – An Elegy to a Young Lady
 - Alexander Pope –The First Satire of the Second Book of Horace
 - See also 1733 in poetry
 
Births
- January 12 – Antoine-Marin Lemierre, French poet and dramatist (died 1793)
 - March 13 – Joseph Priestley, English natural philosopher and theologian (died 1804)
 - March 18 – Christoph Friedrich Nicolai, German critic and bookseller (died 1811)
 - August 22 – Jean-François Ducis, French dramatist (died 1816)
 - September 5 – Christoph Martin Wieland, German poet (died 1813)
 - Unknown date – Robert Lloyd, English poet and satirist (died 1764)[4]
 
Deaths
- January 21 – Bernard de Mandeville, Dutch-born satirist and philosopher writing in English (born 1670)
 - March 12 – Michel Le Quien, French theologian and historian (born 1661)
 - March 13 – Mademoiselle Aïssé, Circassian-born French letter-writer (born c. 1694)
 - May 10 – Jacob August Franckenstein, German lexicographer (born 1689)
 - June 23 – Johann Jakob Scheuchzer, Swiss scholar (born 1672)
 - August 16 – Matthew Tindal, English deist writer (born 1657)
 - Unknown date – John Dunton, English writer and bookseller (born 1659)[5]
 
References
- 1 2 3 James McLaverty (2001). Pope, Print, and Meaning. Oxford University Press. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-19-818497-3.
 - ↑ Ian Campbell Ross (2001). Laurence Sterne: A Life. Oxford University Press. p. 36. ISBN 978-0-19-212235-3.
 - ↑ Philip H. Highfill; Kalman A. Burnim; Edward A. Langhans (1984). A Biographical Dictionary of Actors, Actresses, Musicians, Dancers, Managers & Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660-1800. SIU Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-8093-1130-9.
 - ↑  
 Cousin, John William (1910), "Lloyd, Robert", A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature, London: J. M. Dent & Sons – via Wikisource
      
       - ↑ Berry, Helen M. (2004). "Dunton, John (1659–1732)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online ed., Jan 2008, accessed 7 Sept 2008
 
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