February 9 – Because of dire family financial straits, Charles Dickens, who has just turned 12, begins work in a blacking factory in London. On February 23 his father, John Dickens, is committed to the Marshalsea prison as a debtor.[2]
May — "Sketches of the Five American Presidents, and of the Five Presidential Candidates, From the Memoranda of a Traveler," by John Neal, the first work by an American author published in a British literary journal.[4]
May 17 – The publisher John Murray with five of Lord Byron's friends and executors, decide to destroy the manuscript of Byron's Memoirs (which he has been given to publish), because of scandalous details that would damage Byron's reputation. Opposed only by Thomas Moore, the two volumes are dismembered and burnt in the fireplace at the John Murray (publisher)'s office, 50 Albemarle Street in London.[5]
June 21 – The Vagrancy Act in England provides for the prosecution of "every Person wilfully exposing to view, in any Street... or public Place, any obscene Print, Picture, or other indecent Exhibition".
September — The first installment is published of the five-part American Writers series by John Neal,[6] the first history of American literature.[7]
unknown date – Julia Catherine Beckwith's St. Ursula's Convent or, The Nun of Canada; Containing Scenes from Real Life becomes the first novel published in Canada by a native-born Canadian (anonymously).
Strachan, John; Mason, Nicholas; Mole, Tom; Snodgrass, Charles (2016) [originally published in 2006 by Pickering & Chatto]. Strachan, John; Mason, Nicholas; Mole, Tom; Snodgrass, Charles (eds.). Blackwood's Magazine, 1817–25. Vol.6. New York City, New York: Routledge. p.157. ISBN978-1-85196-800-8.