Alexander Pope's career as a poet is…
1709 CE
Alexander Pope's career as a poet is launched on May 2 with the publication of the anthology Poetical Miscellanies, The Sixth Part, edited by John Dryden.
It includes two poems by Jonathan Swift and three by Pope.
The publisher, Jacob Tonson, had solicited poems from Pope for the volume three years before; but publication was delayed and finally occurred three weeks before Pope's twenty-first birthday.
Pope does not visit London at the time of publication, instead traveling there in June.
Tonson is a hard bargainer, and had paid Pope thirteen guineas, for the young man's verses (about two pence per line).
Pope will eventually become a hard bargainer himself in dealing with publishers, and although he becomes good friends with Tonson, he will hardly ever write for him again.