This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1794.
Events
- March 12 â The rebuilt Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, in London, designed by Henry Holland, opens to the public.
- May 12 â William Godwin's novel Things as They Are; or, The Adventures of Caleb Williams is published in London as an attack on tyrannical government, although its controversial original preface and ending are suppressed. The work also contains elements of detective fiction.
- May 14 â Mary Wollstonecraft's daughter by American speculator Gilbert Imlay, Fanny, is born in Le Havre.
- June â English poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey first meet, in Oxford while Coleridge is en route for a tour of Wales. They meet again in Bristol in August (where they also meet local poet Robert Lovell and his sisters-in-law, who they will marry; he also introduces them to the publisher Joseph Cottle). After Robespierre's execution in July, they collaborate on the "historic drama" The Fall of Robespierre, published in October. Southey's first published poetry appears and he also writes the radical play Wat Tyler this summer.
- August â Ludwig Tieck graduates from the University of Göttingen and begins a literary career.
- AutumnâÂÂDecember â English playwright Thomas Holcroft is indicted for treason as a member of the Society for Constitutional Information and held in Newgate Prison, London, but released without charge.
- November 14 â The first recorded meeting of the Franklin Literary Society is held at Canonsburg Academy (modern-day Washington & Jefferson College) in Pennsylvania.
New books
Fiction
Children
Drama
Poetry
Non-fiction
Births
Uncertain date
Deaths
- January 16 â Edward Gibbon, English historian (born 1737)
- March 5 â Ramón de la Cruz, Spanish dramatist (born 1731)
- March 24 â Jacques Hébert, French radical journalist (guillotined, born 1757)
- April 5 â Susanna Blamire, English dialect poet and songwriter (born 1747)
- April 13 â Nicolas Chamfort, French wit (suicide, born 1741)
- April 15 â Fabre d'ÃÂglantine, French dramatist and poet (guillotined, born 1750)
- April 27 â Sir William Jones, English philologist (born 1746)
- June 3 â Girolamo Tiraboschi, Italian literary critic (born 1731)
- June 8 â Gottfried August Bürger, German poet (born 1747)
- July 25
- André Chénier, French poet (guillotined, born 1762)
- Jean-Antoine Roucher, French poet (guillotined, born 1745)
- August 14 â George Colman the Elder, English dramatist and essayist (born 1732)
- November 16 â Rudolf Erich Raspe, German writer (born 1736)
References