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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1757.
Events
- February 16 – Jonathan Edwards becomes President of the institution that will become Princeton University.[1]
 - May 3 – The Irish-born actress Peg Woffington, playing Rosalind in As You Like It, suffers a stroke on stage at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden in London and never acts again.[2]
 - May 6 – Asylum confinement of Christopher Smart: The poet Christopher Smart is confined to St Luke's Hospital for Lunatics in London.[3]
 - May – The Baskerville typeface, designed by John Baskerville of Birmingham, England, is first used in a wove paper quarto edition of Virgil (Publii Virgilii Maronis Bucolica, Georgica, et Æneis).
 - September – Pierre-Augustin Caron begins using the name Beaumarchais.[4]
 - September 9 – The Parlement of Toulouse orders a public burning of Jesuit author Hermann Busenbaum's Medulla Theologiae Morales because of its treatment of the subject of regicide.[5]
 - December 11 – On the death of Colley Cibber as Poet Laureate of Great Britain, the post is declined by Thomas Gray and passes to William Whitehead.
 - unknown dates
- Angelo Maria Bandini is appointed librarian of the Laurentian Library in Florence.[6]
 - Robert Raikes becomes proprietor of the Gloucester Journal.
 - Horace Walpole begins the Strawberry Hill Press.
 - Thomas Warton is appointed Professor of Poetry at the University of Oxford.
 
 
New books
Prose
- John Brown – An Estimate of the Manners and Principles of the Times
 - Edmund Burke – A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful
 - John Dalrymple – An Essay Towards a General History of Feudal Property in Great Britain
 - Samuel Derrick (probable compiler) – Harris's List of Covent Garden Ladies (1st edn)
 - Adam Ferguson – The Morality of Stage-Plays Seriously Considered
 - Sarah Fielding – The Lives of Cleopatra and Octavia
 - Edward and Elizabeth Griffith – A Series of Genuine Letters between Henry and Frances vols. i – ii.
 - David Hume – The Natural History of Religion
 - Soame Jenyns – A Free Inquiry into the Nature and Origin of Evil
 - Richard Price – Review of the Principal Questions in Morals
 - Madame Riccoboni – Lettres de Mistriss Fanny Butlerd.
 - Tobias Smollett – A Complete History of England
 - Horace Walpole – A Letter from Xo Ho, a Chinese Philosopher at London, to his Friend Lien Chi at Peking
 - William Warburton – Remarks upon Mr. David Hume's Essay on the Natural History of Religion
 - Joseph Warton – Essay on Pope
 - John Wesley – The Doctrine of Original Sin
 
Drama
- Anonymous – The Taxes
 - Phanuel Bacon – Humorous Ethics, or an Attempt to Cure the Vices and Follies of the Age by a Method Entirely New (5 plays)
 - Denis Diderot – Le Fils naturel
 - Samuel Foote – The Author
 - David Garrick – Lilliput
 - John Home – Douglas
 - Tobias Smollett – The Reprisal
 
Poetry
- Robert Andrews – Eidyllia
 - Cornelius Arnold – Poems
 - Samuel Boyce – Poems
 - John Gilbert Cooper as "Aristippus" – Epistles to the Great
 - John Duncombe – The Feminead (answer to 1754's Feminiad)
 - William Duncombe – The Works of Horace in English Verse (various translators).
 - John Dyer – The Fleece
 - Carlo Gozzi – La tartana degli influssi per l'anno 1756
 - Thomas Gray – Odes
 - William Thompson – Poems
 - William Wilkie – Epigoniad
 - Edward Young – The Works of the Author of Night Thoughts
 
Births
- February 1 – John Philip Kemble, English actor (died 1823)
 - February 6 – Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz, Polish poet and dramatist (died 1841)
 - April 9 – Wojciech Bogusławski, Polish actor, director and dramatist (died 1829)
 - July 21 – Basilius von Ramdohr, German journalist and critic (died 1822)
 - November 9 – William Sotheby, English poet and translator (died 1833)
 - November 13 – Archibald Alison, Scottish essayist and cleric (died 1839)
 - November 18 – William Blake, English poet and artist (died 1827)
 - November 27 (possible year) – Mary Robinson (née Darby), English poet, actress and royal mistress (died 1800)
 - December 4 – Charles Burney, English classicist and book thief (died 1817)
 - Unknown date – Giovanni Antonio Galignani, Italian publisher (died 1821)
 
Deaths
- January 9 – Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle, French dramatist and author (born 1657)
 - January 19 – Thomas Ruddiman, Scottish classical scholar, editor, printer and librarian (born 1674)
 - March 1 – Edward Moore, English dramatist (born 1712)[7]
 - March 8 – Thomas Blackwell, Scottish classical scholar (born 1701)
 - August 28 – David Hartley, English philosopher and psychologist (born 1705)
 - December 11
- Colley Cibber, English dramatist, actor-manager and Poet Laureate of Great Britain (born 1671)
 - Edmund Curll, English bookseller and publisher (born 1675)
 
 - December 15 (burial) – John Dyer, a Welsh poet, painter and Anglican cleric (born 1699)
 
In literature
References
- ↑ Jonathan Edwards (1840). The Works of Jonathan Edwards, A.M. Ball, Arnold and Company. p. 274.
 - ↑ Sandra Mayer; Julia Novak (21 May 2020). Life Writing and Celebrity: Exploring Intersections. Taylor & Francis. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-00-068236-6.
 - ↑ Sherbo, Arthur (1967). Christopher Smart: Scholar of the University. Michigan State University Press. p. 112. He may have been confined in a private madhouse before this time.
 - ↑ Hugh Thomas (2006). Beaumarchais in Seville: An Intermezzo. Yale University Press. p. 23. ISBN 0-300-13464-9.
 - ↑ Voltaire; John Renwick (2000). Traité sur la tolérance. Voltaire Foundation. p. 308. ISBN 9780729407441.
 - ↑ William J. Connell (10 September 2002). Society and Individual in Renaissance Florence. University of California Press. p. 282. ISBN 978-0-520-23254-9.
 - ↑ Restoration and 18th-Century Drama. Macmillan International Higher Education. November 1980. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-349-16422-6.
 
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