1849 in literature
This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1849.
—Dickens, opening of David Copperfield
Events
- March–November – La Tribune des Peuples, a pan-European romantic nationalist periodical, is published by Adam Mickiewicz.
- April 22 – Fyodor Dostoyevsky and fellow members of the literary Petrashevsky Circle in Russia are arrested for expressing their progressive views. Sentenced to death on November 16 and facing a firing squad on December 23, he and some others are reprieved at the last moment and exiled to the katorga prison camps in Siberia.
- May 1 – Charles Dickens's Bildungsroman David Copperfield begins serial publication by Bradbury and Evans in London.
- May 10 – The Astor Place Riot takes place in Manhattan over a dispute between two Shakespearean actors, the American Edwin Forrest and the Englishman William Macready. Over 20 people are killed.
- May 28 – Anne Brontë dies of tuberculosis aged 29 at Scarborough on the Yorkshire coast of England, where she is buried. Until 2013, her headstone mistakenly gave her age as 28.
- September 20 – Honoré de Balzac travels to Poland to meet Eveline Hanska, whom he will marry shortly before his death next year.
- October 3 – Edgar Allan Poe is found on the streets of Baltimore delirious, "in great distress, and... in need of immediate assistance". He dies on October 7 aged 40, of an uncertain cause.
- October–December – Thomas De Quincey's essay The English Mail-Coach appears in issues of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine.
- November – The English scholarly correspondence magazine Notes and Queries is first published.
- November 14 – A public festival is held in Denmark to mark the 70th birthday of Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger.
- J. A. Froude's semi-autobiographical, epistolary philosophical novel of religious doubt The Nemesis of Faith is published by John Chapman in London. A copy is burned by William Sewell, Dean of Exeter College, Oxford, himself a novelist.
- The Leipzig publisher B. G. Teubner begins publishing the Bibliotheca Teubneriana series of editions of the Classics.
- Who's Who is published for the first time in the United Kingdom.
- Philip Massinger's play Believe as You List receives its first publication, 218 years after its theatrical première.
New books
Fiction
- William Harrison Ainsworth – The Lancashire Witches
- Charlotte Brontë – Shirley
- François-René de Chateaubriand – Memoirs from Beyond the Grave
- Charles Dickens – David Copperfield
- Fyodor Dostoevsky – Netochka Nezvanova
- Alexandre Dumas, père – The Queen's Necklace
- Paul Féval – Les Belles-de-nuit ou Les Anges de la famille
- J. A. Froude – The Nemesis of Faith
- Catherine Gore – The Diamond and the Pearl
- Charles Kingsley – Alton Locke
- Herman Melville
- *Mardi
- *Redburn
- Mayne Reid – The Rifle Rangers
- G. W. M. Reynolds – The Bronze Statue
- George Sand – La Petite Fadette
- Theodor Storm – Immensee
Children and young people
- Charlotte Mary Yonge – The Railroad Children
Drama
- Christian Friedrich Hebbel – Der Rubin
- Gaspar Núñez de Arce – Amor y Orgullo
- Eugène Scribe and Ernest Legouvé – Adrienne Lecouvreur
Poetry
- Matthew Arnold – The Strayed Reveller
- Petrus Augustus de Genestet – De Sint-Nicolaasavond
- Elias Lönnrot – Kalevala
- Edgar Allan Poe – "Annabel Lee", "Eldorado", "The Bells", "A Dream Within a Dream"
Non-fiction
- John Mitchell Kemble – History of the Saxons in England
- Søren Kierkegaard – The Sickness Unto Death
- Francis Parkman – The Oregon Trail
- Thomas Phillips – Wales, the Language, Social Condition, Moral Character, and Religious Opinions of the People, considered in their relation to Education...
- John Ruskin – The Seven Lamps of Architecture
- William Smith – Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
- Henry David Thoreau – Resistance to Civil Government
- George Ticknor – A History of Spanish Literature
- Chandos Wren-Hoskyns – A Short Inquiry into the History of Agriculture in Mediæval and Modern Times
Births
- January 9 – Laura Kieler, Norwegian novelist and dramatic inspiration
- January 22 – August Strindberg, Swedish dramatist
- February 18 – Alexander Kielland, Norwegian novelist
- February 27 – Václav Beneš Třebízský, Czech novelist
- June 9 – Karl Tanera, German military writer and novelist
- July 22 – Emma Lazarus, American poet
- August 8 – Hume Nisbet, Scottish thriller writer, poet and artist
- August 9 – Amy Catherine Walton, English writer of Christian children's books
- August 23 – W. E. Henley, English poet
- August 30 – J. M. Dent, English publisher
- September 3 – Sarah Orne Jewett, American writer
- October 7 – James Whitcomb Riley, American writer and poet
- November 24 – Frances Hodgson Burnett, English children's writer and playwright
Deaths
- January 6 – Hartley Coleridge, English poet and critic
- February 8 – France Prešeren, Slovenian poet
- February 19 – Bernard Barton, English Quaker poet
- May 22 – Maria Edgeworth, Anglo-Irish novelist
- May 28 – Anne Brontë, English novelist and poet
- June 4 – Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington, Irish novelist and literary hostess
- July 7 – Goffredo Mameli, Italian poet
- July 12 – Horace Smith, English poet and novelist
- July 25 – James Kenney, English dramatist
- July 27 – Charlotte von Ahlefeld, German novelist
- July 31 – Sándor Petőfi, Hungarian poet and revolutionary
- August 25 – Adele Schopenhauer, German novelist and paper-cut artist
- October 7 – Edgar Allan Poe, American poet, short story writer and critic