1732 in literature
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1732.
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Events
    
- April – The London Magazine is founded in opposition to the pro-Tory Gentlemen's Magazine.[1]
 - December 7 – The original Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, London (today's Royal Opera House) is opened by John Rich with a production of William Congreve's The Way of the World.[2]
 - December 13 – The first issue of Then Swänska Argus, by Olof von Dalin, is published in Sweden, introducing the "younger new Swedish" (yngre nysvenska) literary language.
 - December 28 – The first edition of Poor Richard's Almanack, by Benjamin Franklin, is published in America.
 - unknown date – Trinity College Library in Dublin, designed by Thomas Burgh, is completed.[3]
 
New books
    
    Prose
    
- George Berkeley – Alciphron
 - Johann Jakob Bodmer – translation of John Milton's Paradise Lost into German prose
 - Elizabeth Boyd – The Happy-Unfortunate
 - Mary Davys – The False Friend (fiction)
 - Philip Doddridge – Sermons on the Religious Education of Children
 - Robert Dodsley – A Muse in Livery
 - George Granville, Lord Lansdowne – The Genuine Works
 - Thomas-Simon Gueullette – Les Sultanes de Guzarate, contes mogols (Mogul Tales; or, the Dreams of Men Awake)
 - John Horsley – Britannia Romana, or The Roman Antiquities of Britain
 - William King – The Toast
 - Alain-René Lesage – Les avantures de monsieur Robert Chevalier, dit de Beauchêne, capitaine de flibustiers dans la Nouvelle-France (The Adventures of Robert Chevalier, Call'd de Beauchene, Captain of a Privateer in New-France)[4]
 - George Lyttelton, 1st Baron Lyttelton – The Progress of Love
 - Daniel Neal – The History of the Puritans or Protestant Non-Conformists
 - Richard Savage – An Epistle to the Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole
 - Philip Skippon – An Account of a Journey Made Thro ̓ Part of the Low-Countries, Germany, Italy, and France
 - Jonathan Swift 
- The Lady's Dressing Room
 - The Grand Question Debated
 - (with Pope and others) Miscellanies: The Third Volume
 
 - Isaac Watts – A Short View of the Whole Scripture History
 - Leonard Welsted – Of Dulness and Scandal (answer to The Dunciad)
 - Gilbert West – Stowe
 - Martín Sarmiento – Demostración apologética
 
Drama
    
- Henry Carey
- Amelia (opera)
 - The Disappointment
 - Terminta
 
 - Henry Fielding
 - John Gay (with Alexander Pope) – Acis and Galatea (opera by Handel)
 - Charles Johnson – Caelia
 - John Kelly – The Married Philosopher
 - Pierre de Marivaux – The Triumph of Love (Le Triomphe de l'amour)
 - James Miller – The Modish Couple
 - Voltaire – Zaïre
 
Poetry
    
- Heyat Mahmud – Sarbabhedbāṇī; Bengali[5]
 - John Milton – Milton's Paradise Lost, edited by Richard Bentley
 
Births
    
- January 6 – Matija Antun Relković, Croatian grammarian and poet (died 1798)
 - January 24 – Pierre de Beaumarchais, French writer (died 1799)[6]
 - February – Charles Churchill, English satirist and poet (died 1764)
 - February 19 – Richard Cumberland, English dramatist (died 1811)
 - April – George Colman the Elder, English dramatist and essayist (died 1794)
 - August 24 – Peter Ernst Wilde, German physician, journalist and printer (died 1785)
 - September 29 – Samuel Musgrave, English classical scholar and pamphleteer (died 1780)
 
Deaths
    
- February 13 – Charles-René d'Hozier, French historian (born 1640)[7]
 - February 22 – Bishop Francis Atterbury, English politician and writer (born 1663)
 - March 20 – Johann Ernst Hanxleden, German poet and lexicographer (born 1681)[8]
 - March 29 (buried) – Jane Barker, English dramatist and poet (born 1652)
 - May 9 – Samuel Palmer, English printer (year of birth unknown)
 - July 3 (buried) – Mary Davys, Irish poet and dramatist (born 1674)[9]
 - December 2 – Constantia Grierson, Irish poet and classical scholar (born c. 1705)
 - December 4 – John Gay, English poet and dramatist (born 1685)[10]
 - December 22 – Joseph Thurston, English poet (born 1704)[11]
 
References
    
- The Gentleman's Magazine and Historical Review. Bradbury, Evans. 1857. p. 6.
 - Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
 - Library Association (1961). The Library Association Record. Library Association. p. 45-46.
 - "Biography – CHEVALIER, Beauchêne, ROBERT – Volume II (1701-1740) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography". www.biographi.ca. Retrieved 8 March 2019.
 - Wakil Ahmed (2012). "Heyat Mamud". In Sirajul Islam; Miah, Sajahan; Khanam, Mahfuza; Ahmed, Sabbir (eds.). Banglapedia: the National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Online ed.). Dhaka, Bangladesh: Banglapedia Trust, Asiatic Society of Bangladesh. ISBN 984-32-0576-6. OCLC 52727562. OL 30677644M. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
 - Morton, Brian (2003). Beaumarchais and the American Revolution. Lanham, Md: Lexington Books. p. 1. ISBN 9780739104682.
 - Bernard Bolingbroke Woodward; William Leist ReadwinCates (1872). Encyclopaedia of Chronology: Historical and Biographical. Lee and Shepard. p. 426.
 - Catholic Encyclopedia. Appleton. 1910. p. 131.
 - Harte, Liam (2009). The literature of the Irish in Britain : autobiography and memoir, 1725-2001. Basingstoke England New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 1. ISBN 9780230234017.
 - Brant, Clare (2007). Walking the streets of eighteenth-century London : John Gay's Trivia (1716. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. p. 10. ISBN 9780199280490.
 - Fragmenta Genealogica: Volume 8. Heritage Books. December 1996. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-7884-0578-5.
 
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