This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1713.
Events
March 12 – Richard Steele and Joseph Addison found the short-lived The Guardian; in the same year, Steele founds another periodical, ostensibly as a sequel to it, the likewise short-lived The Englishman.[1]
April 14 – The first performance is given in London of Addison's libertarian play Cato, a Tragedy, which will be influential on both sides of the Atlantic.[2]
October – Alexander Pope announces that he is to begin a definitive translation of the works of Homer.[3]
unknown date – Vitsentzos Kornaros's early 17th-century Cretan romantic epic poem Erotokritos (Ἐρωτόκριτος), is printed, for the first time, in Venice.
New books
Prose
John Arbuthnot – Proposals for printing a very curious discourse... a treatise of the art of political lying, with an abstract of the first volume ("The Art of Political Lying")
Antoine Hamilton – Mémoires du comte de Gramont (published anonymously)
John Hughes – Letters of Abelard and Heloise (widely published translation)[4]
Henri Joutel – Journal historique du dernier voyage que feu M. de La Sale fit dans le golfe de Mexique (Joutel's journal of La Salle's last voyage, 1684–1687)
Thomas Parnell – An Essay on the Different Stiles of Poetry
^Hughes, John; Mr Pope (1360). Letters of Abelard and Heloise. London: James Rivington and J Fletcher, P Davey and B Law, T Lowdes and T Caslon. letters of abelard and heloise hughes