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1642 in literature

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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1642.

Events

  • May – The 35-year-old John Milton marries the teenage Mary Powell. A few weeks later she leaves him in London and returns to her family in Oxfordshire.
  • May/June – English Cavalier poet Richard Lovelace is incarcerated in the Gatehouse Prison, Westminster for defying Parliament. During his time there he may be writing "To Althea, from Prison".
  • September 2 – London theatre closure 1642: The theatres in London are closed by order of the Puritan Long Parliament; the "lascivious mirth and levity" of stage plays are to "cease and be forborn" for the next 18 years, during the English Civil War and the Interregnum. Richard Brome's A Jovial Crew is reportedly staged on the final day, making it the last to be legitimately performed in the era of English Renaissance theatre.

New books

Prose

  • Thomas Browne – Religio Medici
  • Gauthier de Costes, seigneur de la Calprenède – Cassandre
  • Thomas Fuller – The Holy State and the Profane State
  • Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft – Nederduytsche Historiën (History of the Netherlands, publication begins)
  • Sir Walter Ralegh – The Prince, or Maxims of State
  • Alonso de Castillo Solórzano – La garduña de Sevilla y anzuelo de las bolsas
  • Tohfatu'l-Ahbab, a Persian-language work by Muhammad Ali Kashmiri

Drama

  • Antonio Coello – Los empeños de seis horas (approximate date)
  • Pierre Corneille – Polyeucte
  • François le Métel de Boisrobert – La Belle Palène
  • Donaires del gusto
  • Pierre du Ryer – Saul
  • Francis Jaques – The Queen of Corsica
  • James Shirley – The Sisters
  • Jan Vos – Klucht van Oene (The Farce of Oene)

Poetry

  • John Denham – Cooper's Hill, the first example in English of a poem devoted to local description, in this case the Thames scenery around the author's home at Egham in Surrey
  • Richard Lovelace – "To Althea, from Prison"
  • Alonso de Castillo Solórzano – Academias morales de las musas

Births

  • March 15 (baptised) – Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl of Rochester, English politician and writer (died 1711)
  • April 21 – Simon de la Loubère, French diplomat, writer, mathematician and poet (died 1729)
  • April 30 – Christian Weise, German dramatist and poet (died 1708)
  • December 30 – Vincenzo da Filicaja, Florentine poet (died 1707)
  • Unknown dates
    • Abdul-Qādir Bīdel, Persian Sufi poet (died 1720)
    • Josep Romaguera, Catalan author (died 1723)
    • Ihara Saikaku (井原 西鶴), Japanese poet and creator of the ukiyozōshi (floating world) genre of prose (died 1693)
    • James Tyrrell, English political philosopher (died 1718)
  • Probable year of birth
    • Thomas Shadwell, English dramatist (died 1698)
    • Edward Taylor, English-born colonial American poet and author (died 1729)

Deaths

  • May 14 – Nicolas Ysambert, French theologian (born c. 1565)
  • June 1 – Sir John Suckling, English poet (born 1609)
  • July 5 – Festus Hommius, Dutch Calvinist theologian (born 1576)
  • Unknown dates
    • Abdul-Haqq Dehlavi, Indian Islamic scholar and writer (born 1551)
    • Sir Francis Kynaston, English poet (born 1587)
    • James Mabbe, English scholar, poet and translator (born 1572)

References

References

  1. Campbell, Gordon. (2004). "Milton, John (1608–1674)". Oxford University Press.
  2. Wood, Anthony. "Athenæ Oxonienses".
  3. Muḥammad, A. K., & Pandit, K. N. (2009). A Muslim missionary in mediaeval Kashmir: Being the English translation of Tohfatu'l-ahbab. New Delhi: Voice of India.
  4. Nathan Haskell Dole. (December 2003). "The Bibliophile Dictionary: A Biographical Record of the Great Authors". The Minerva Group, Inc..
  5. Anthony a Wood. (1967). "Athen Oxonienses: An Exact History of All the Writers and Bishops who Have Had Their Education in the University of Oxford.". B. Franklin.
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