English Literature timeline
Shakespeare's sonnets, written ten years previously, are published
Shakespeare's last completed play, The Tempest, is performed
John Smith publishes A Description of New England, an account of his exploration of the region in 1614
John Donne, England's leading Metaphysical poet, becomes dean of St Paul's
John Heminge and Henry Condell publish thirty-six Shakespeare plays in the First Folio
George Herbert's only volume of poems, The Temple, is published posthumously
John Milton's Lycidas is published in memory of a Cambridge friend, Edward King
The poems of Massachusetts author Anne Bradstreet are published in London under the title The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America
Devoted fisherman Izaak Walton publishes the classic work on the subject, The Compleat Angler
On the first day of the new year Samuel Pepys gets up late, eats the remains of the turkey and begins his diary
Paradise Lost is published, earning its author John Milton just £10
Samuel Pepys ends his diary, after only writing it for nine years
Part I of The Pilgrim's Progress, written during John Bunyan's two spells in Bedford Gaol, is published and is immediately popular
John Bunyan publishes The Life and Death of Mr Badman, an allegory of a misspent life that is akin to a novel
Aphra Behn's novel Oroonoko makes an early protest against the inhumanity of the African slave trade
John Locke publishes his Essay concerning Human Understanding, arguing that all knowledge is based on experience
The Augustan Age begins in English literature, claiming comparison with the equivalent flowering under Augustus Caesar
The Tatler launches a new style of journalism in Britain's coffee houses, followed two years later by the Spectator
25-year-old George Berkeley attacks Locke in his Treatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge
Alexander Pope's Rape of the Lock introduces a delicate vein of mock-heroic in English poetry
Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, with its detailed realism, can be seen as the first English novel
Jonathan Swift launches his hero on a series of bitterly satirical adventures in Gulliver's Travels
David Hume publishes his Treatise of Human Nature, in which he applies to the human mind the principles of experimental science
Samuel Richardson's Clarissa begins the correspondence which grows into the longest novel in the English language
Henry Fielding introduces a character of lasting appeal in the lusty but good-hearted Tom Jones