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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1785.
Events
- January 1
- The Daily Universal Register (later The Times) is first published, in London.[1]
 - The Paris theatre company Théâtre des Variétés-Amusantes moves to a temporary new building in the gardens of the Palais-Royal.
 
 - February 2 – Sarah Siddons makes her London debut in her most famous rôle, Lady Macbeth, at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.[2]
 - February – The English heiress Mary Bowes escapes from her husband, Andrew Robinson Stoney, and begins divorce proceedings.
 - April 14 – After today's death of the English poet William Whitehead in London, Thomas Warton succeeds him as Poet Laureate of Great Britain, William Mason having refused the post.
 - May 22 – Robert Burns' first child, Elizabeth ("Dear-bought Bess"), is born to his mother's servant, Elizabeth Paton.[3]
 - June 23 – The Litvak rabbi and writer Aryeh Leib ben Asher Gunzberg dies at Metz in France after a book-case topples on him, according to tradition.[4]
 - November 28 – The Marquis de Sade finishes writing The 120 Days of Sodom (Les 120 Journées de Sodome) while imprisoned in the Bastille; it will not be published until 1904.
 - unknown date
- Giacomo Casanova is appointed librarian to Count Joseph Karl von Waldstein at the Duchcov Château in Bohemia.[5]
 - A new building for the Prussian Royal Library is completed in Berlin.
 
 
New books
Fiction
- Anna Maria Bennett – Anna
 - Elizabeth Blower – Maria
 - Denis Diderot, part trans. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe – Jacques the Fatalist (Jacques der Fatalist und sein Herr)
 - Richard Graves – Eugenius
 - Karl Philipp Moritz – Anton Reiser (to 1790)
 
Children
- Rudolf Erich Raspe, anonymously – Baron Munchausen's Narrative of his Marvellous Travels and Campaigns in Russia
 
Drama
- George Colman the Younger – Two to One
 - Richard Cumberland – The Natural Son
 - Elizabeth Inchbald – Appearance Is Against Them
 - John O'Keefe – The Poor Soldier
 - Emanuel Schikaneder – Der Fremde
 
Poetry
- János Bacsanyi – The Valour of the Magyars
 - Samuel Egerton Brydges – Sonnets and other Poems
 - Robert Burns – "To a Mouse"
 - William Combe – The Royal Dream
 - William Cowper – The Task
 - George Crabbe – The News-Paper
 - William Hayley – A Philosophical, Historical and Moral Essay on Old Maids
 - Samuel Johnson – The Poetical Works
 - Friedrich Schiller – Ode to Joy (An die Freude)
 - Charles Wilkins (translator) – Bhagvat-geeta, or Dialogues of Kreeshna and Arjoon
 - John Wolcot as "Peter Pindar"
- The Lousiad
 - Lyric Odes, for the Year 1785
 
 - Ann Yearsley – Poems
 
Non-fiction
- Ethan Allen – Reason: the Only Oracle of Man[6]
 - James Boswell – The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson, LL.D.
 - Edmund Burke – Speech on the Nabob of Arcot's Debts
 - Francis Grose – A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue
 - Samuel Johnson – Prayers and Meditations
 - Immanuel Kant – Groundwork of the Metaphysic of Morals (Grundlegung zur Metaphysik der Sitten)
 - William Paley – The Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy
 - Clara Reeve – The Progress of Romance
 - Thomas Reid – Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man
 - John Scott – Critical Essays on Some of the Poems of Several English Poets
 
Births
- January 4 – Jakob Grimm, German philologist, jurist and mythologist (died 1863)
 - January 31 – Magdalena Dobromila Rettigová, Czech cookery writer (died 1845)
 - March 3 – Frances Mary Richardson Currer, English heiress and bibliophile (died 1861)
 - March 7 – Alessandro Manzoni, Italian poet and novelist (died 1873)
 - March 18 – He Changling (賀長齡), Chinese scholar and writer on governance (died 1848)
 - March 21 – Henry Kirke White, English poet (died 1806)
 - April 4 – Bettina von Arnim, German novelist (died 1859)
 - April 7 – Lorenzo Hammarsköld, Swedish poet and author (died 1827)
 - May 3 – Vicente López y Planes, Argentine politician and writer (died 1856)
 - May 18 – John Wilson (Christopher North), Scottish writer (died 1854)
 - August 15 – Thomas De Quincey, English essayist (died 1859)
 - October 18 – Thomas Love Peacock, English novelist, poet and East India Company official (died 1866)
 - October 30 – Hermann, Fürst von Pückler-Muskau – German travel and gardening writer (died 1871)
 
Deaths
- January 19 – Jonathan Toup, English classicist, critic and cleric (born 1713)[7]
 - April 14 – William Whitehead, English poet laureate (born 1715)
 - May 4 – János Sajnovics, Hungarian linguist (born 1733)
 - August 31 – Pietro Chiari, Italian playwright, novelist and librettist (born 1712)
 - September 17 – Antoine Léonard Thomas, French poet and critic (born 1732)
 - November 12 – Richard Burn, English legal writer (born 1709)
 - November 25 – Richard Glover, English poet and politician (born 1712)
 - December 6 – Kitty Clive, English actress and writer of farce (born 1711)
 - December 18 – Joseph Allegranza, Milanese historian (born 1715)
 - December 29 – Johan Herman Wessel, Norwegian-born Danish poet and satirist (born 1742)
 - unknown date – Ali Haider Multani, Punjabi Sufi poet (born 1690)[8]
 
References
- ↑ Steinberg, S. H. (2017). Five Hundred Years of Printing. Courier Dover Publications. p. 14. ISBN 9780486814452.
 - ↑ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
 - ↑ "Paton, Elizabeth". The Burns Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2014-01-28.
 - ↑ Eleff, Zev (Winter 2012). "The Wages of Criticism". Jewish Review of Books. 8. Retrieved 2013-03-06.
 - ↑ Walter M. Weiss (1997). Looking for Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: A Travel Companion Through Salzburg, Prague & Vienna. Brandstätter. p. 90. ISBN 978-3-85447-729-7.
 - ↑ Holbrook, Stewart H. (1940). Ethan Allen. New York: MacMillan. ISBN 0-395-24908-2. OCLC 975403.
 - ↑ John Burke (1838). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland, Enjoying Territorial Possessions Or High Official Rank: But Univested with Heritable Honours. H. Colburn. p. 297.
 - ↑ Bakhshish Singh Nijjar (1968). Panjāb Under the Great Mughals, 1526-1707. Thacker. p. 173.
 
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