This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1877.
Events
- January 24 â ÃÂmile Zola's L'Assommoir (sometimes translated as "The Dram Shop"), seventh in his novel sequence Les Rougon-Macquart, is first published in book format a few weeks after its serialisation ends in Le Bien public (Paris). It sells more than 50,000 copies by the end of the year.
- February 24âÂÂMarch 17 â Robert Louis Stevenson's first published work of fiction, the novella "An Old Song", appears anonymously in four episodes in the magazine London. It is first attributed to Stevenson in 1980.
- July â The ending of Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina is published in Russkiy vestnik.
- July 15 â "Coppino Law" in Italy makes elementary schools mandatory, free and secular.
- October â Robert Louis Stevenson publishes the short story "A Lodging for the Night" (in Temple Bar magazine), later collected in New Arabian Nights.
- October 15 â Edward L. Wheeler's first story featuring Deadwood Dick, set on the American frontier, opens the first number of Beadle's Half-Dime Library, published in New York.
- November 5 â The Mitchell Library is established in Glasgow.
- November 14 â Henrik Ibsen's first contemporary realist drama The Pillars of Society is premièred at the Odense Teater (having been first published on October 11 in Copenhagen).
- November 24 â Anna Sewell's novel Black Beauty, his grooms and companions: the autobiography of a horse "translated from the equine" is published by Jarrolds of Norwich in England. Her only book, published five months before her death arising from long-standing illness, it rapidly establishes its position as an all-time bestseller, going on to sell fifty million copies and becoming the sixth best seller in the English language.
- December 30 â Swedish dramatist August Strindberg marries his mistress, the divorced actress Siri von Essen, a member of the Finnish-Swedish minor nobility.
New books
Fiction
Children and young people
Drama
Poetry
Non-fiction
Births
- January 4 â Sextil PuÃÂcariu, Romanian linguist, philologist and journalist (died 1948)
- February 7 â Alfred Williams, English "hammerman poet" (died 1930)
- March 6 â Rose Fyleman, English writer and poet (died 1957)
- April 14 â Donald Maxwell, English travel writer and illustrator (died 1936)
- April 29 â Henri Stahl, Romanian historian, short story writer, memoirist and stenographer (died 1942)
- June 11 â Renée Vivien, born Pauline Mary Tarn, English-born French-language Symbolist poet (died 1909)
- July 2 â Hermann Hesse, German-Swiss poet, novelist and painter (died 1962)
- August 27 â Lloyd C. Douglas, American novelist and pastor (died 1951)
- September 1 â Rex Beach, American novelist and playwright (died 1949)
- September 9 â James Agate, English diarist and critic (died 1947)
- November 15 â William Hope Hodgson, English fiction writer (killed in action 1918)
Deaths
- January 29 â Caroline Howard Jervey, American author, poet, and teacher (born 1823)
- February 18 â Henrietta A. Bingham, American writer and editor (born 1841)
- April â Ernst Moritz Ludwig Ettmüller, German philologist (born 1802)
- June 15 â Caroline Norton (née Caroline Sheridan), English poet, pamphleteer and social reformer (born 1808)
- June 17 â John Stevens Cabot Abbott, American historian and pastor (born 1805)
- August 30 â Toru Dutt, multilingual Indian Bengali poet, novelist and translator, of pulmonary tuberculosis (born 1856)
- September 12 â Emily Pepys, English child diarist (born 1833)
- October 10 â Johann Georg Baiter, Swiss philologist and critic (born 1801)
- October 16 â Théodore Barrière, French dramatist (born 1823)
- October 28 â Julia Kavanagh, Irish novelist (born 1824)
- December 12 â José de Alencar, Brazilian novelist (born 1829)
References