1720 in literature

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This article is a summary of the major literary events and publications of 1720.

Events

  • September–October – The "South Sea Bubble", i.e. the collapse of the South Sea Company in England, affects the fortunes of many writers, including John Gay. It features in several works of literature. There are suspicions of complicity by Robert Walpole's government.
  • December 29 – The Haymarket Theatre in London opens with a performance of La Fille à la Morte, ou le Badeaut de Paris.
  • unknown date
    • Jonathan Swift begins major composition work on Gulliver's Travels in Ireland.[1]
    • 18-year-old London apprentice printer John Matthews is hanged for treason for producing the anonymous Jacobite pamphlet Vox Populi Vox Dei, the last time a British printer suffers execution for his work.[2]

New books

Prose

Drama

Poetry

  • John Gay – Poems on Several Occasions
  • A New Miscellany of Original Poems (anthology)
  • Matthew Prior – The Conversation
  • Allan Ramsay
    • A Poem on the South-Sea
    • Poems

Births

Deaths

References

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