Authors: Richard Holmes
Tags: #History, #Modern, #19th Century, #Biography & Autobiography, #Science & Technology, #Science, #Philosophy & Social Aspects, #Fiction
44
See William Feaver,
The Art of John Martin,
Oxford, 1975; and discussion in Tim Fulford (editor),
Literature, Science and Exploration in the Romantic Era,
2004, pp97-107
45
‘[Ritchie] is going to Fezan in Africa there to proceed if possible like Mungo Park’, John Keats to George Keats, 5 January 1818; ‘Haydon showed me a letter he had received from Tripoli…Ritchie was well and in good spirits, among Camels, Turbans, Palm trees and sands…’, Keats to George Keats, 16-31 December 1818
Chapter 6: Davy on the Gas
1
Described in Davy’s letters to his mother Grace Davy, in June Z. Fullmer,
Young Humphry Davy,
American Philosophical Society, 2000, pp328-32
2
JD Fragments, pp2-5
3
Thomas Thorpe,
Humphry Davy, Poet and Philosopher,
1896, p10
4
Anne Treneer,
The Mercurial Chemist: A Life of Sir Humphry Davy,
1963, p6
5
Local sources, author’s visit to Penzance, May 2006
6
Ibid.
7
JD Memoirs, p68
8
There are various versions of this early poem in the HD Archive: see Paris, vol 1, p29; Treneer, pp4-5; or Fullmer, p13
9
Treneer, p16
10
John Davy quoted in ibid., p21
11
Ibid.
12
Introduction to
Humphry Davy on Geology: The 1805 Lectures,
pxxix, British Library catalogue X421/22592
13
HD Archive Box 13 (f) pp41-50, Mss notebook dated 1795-97
14
HD Archive Box 13 (f) p61
15
The whole poem, no fewer than thirty-two stanzas, is given in JD Memoirs, pp23-7
16
HD Works 2, p6
17
Jan Golinski,
Science as Public Culture: Chemistry and Enlightenment in Britain 1760-1820,
CUP, 1992, pp133-42
18
Ibid., p109
19
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, ‘Maxims and Reflections’, from Goethe,
Scientific Studies,
edited by Douglas Miller, Suhrkamp edition of Goethe’s
Works,
vol 12, New York, 1988, p308
20
Reprinted in HD Works 9
21
See Madison Smartt Bell,
Lavoisier in the Year One: The Birth of a New Science in the Age of Revolution,
Atlas Books, Norton, 2005. See also J.-L. David’s famous romantic portrait,
Antoine Laurent de Lavoisier et sa Femme
(1788)
22
Preface to
Traité Élémentaire,
translated by Robert Kerr, 1790
23
Consolations,
Dialogue V, in HD Works 9, pp361-2
24
JD Memoirs, p34
25
For the Watt family, see Jenny Uglow,
The Lunar Men: The Friends who Made the Future, 1730-1810,
Faber, 2002
26
Treneer, p24
27
From Beddoes notes made 1793, quoted in Golinski, p171
28
HD Mss Truro, Beddoes letter in Davies Giddy Mss DG 42/1
29
Ibid.
30
Dorothy A. Stansfield,
Thomas Beddoes MD: Chemist, Physician, Democrat,
Reidel Publishing, Boston, 1984, pp162-4
31
HD Mss Truro, Davies Giddy Mss DG 42/8
32
HD Mss Truro, Davies Giddy Mss DG 42/4
33
See Holmes,
Coleridge: Early Visions
34
John Ayrton Paris,
The Life of Sir Humphry Davy, 2
vols, 1831, vol 1, p38
35
See David Knight,
Humphry Davy: Vision and Power,
Blackwell Science Biographies, 1992
36
Richard Lovell Edgeworth 1793, quoted in Fullmer, p106
37
Treneer, pp30-1
38
HD Archive Notebook 20a; and Fullmer, p169
39
HD Works 2, p85
40
HD Works 2, p84
41
HD Works 2, pp85-6; see HD Archive Ms Notebook B (1799)
42
HD Archive Mss Box 13(h) pp15-17 and Box 13(f) pp33-47
43
See Fullmer, pp163-6
44
From author’s visit and photographs, May 2006. See also John Allen, ‘The Early History of Varfell’, in
Ludgvan,
Ludgvan Horticultural Society, no date
45
Golinski, pp157-83
46
Reply from James Watt, Birmingham, 13 November 1799, in JD Fragments, pp24-6
47
HD Works 3, pp278-9
48
HD Works 3, pp278-80; on Davy’s impetuosity and courage see Oliver Sacks,
Uncle Tungsten: Memories of a Chemical Boyhood,
Picador, 2001
49
Joseph Cottle,
Reminiscences,
vol 1, 1847, p264
50
HD Works 3, pp246-7; James Watt, Birmingham, 13 November 1799, in JD Fragments, pp24-6; equipment partly illustrated in Fullmer, p216
51
Treneer, p72
52
Fullmer, p213
53
Ibid., p214
54
HD Works 3, p272
55
HD,
Researches Chemical and Philosophical chiefly concerning Nitrous Oxide,
London, 1800, p461. See HD Works 3
56
JD Life 1, pp79-82
57
HD Archive Mss Box 13 (c) pp5-6; and Fullmer, p215
58
Treneer, p47
59
HD Archive Mss Box 20 (b) p118
60
HD Archive Mss Box 20 (b) p120
61
HD,
Researches,
1800, p491
62
Ibid., p492; discussed in Cartwright, pp237-8
63
HD Works 9, pp74-5; comments by Physicus, Day 4, in
Salmonia,
1828
64
Fullmer, p218
65
Cartwright on Anaesthetics, 1952, pp100-23; Treneer, pp40-8
66
HD Archive Mss Box 20(b) p208
67
HD Archive Mss Box 20 (b) p209
68
HD
Researches,
1800, pp100-2
69
A premonition of Frankenstein! HD
Researches,
1800, p102
70
Southey to Tom Southey, 1799, from Treneer, p44
71
A Memoir of Maria Edgeworth,
edited by her children, 1867, vol 1, p97
72
Treneer, p45
73
Ibid., p43
74
Ibid., p54
75
Southey to William Wynn, 30 March 1799
76
‘Unfinished Poem on Mount’s Bay’, in Paris, vol 1, pp36-9
77
JD Fragments, pp34-5
78
Ibid., pp37-9
79
JD Life 1, p119
80
Treneer, p44
81
Holmes, ‘Kubla Coleridge’, in
Coleridge: Early Visions,
1989
82
‘Detail of Mr Coleridge’,
Researches,
1800, and HD Works 3, pp306-7
83
Coleridge to Davy, 1 January 1800,
Coleridge Collected Letters,
edited by E.L. Griggs, vol 1; and see Treneer, p58
84
JD Memoirs, pp58-9
85
JD Fragments, p24; Fullmer, pp269-70
86
HD Works 3, pp289-90; and compare Fullmer, pp269-70
87
HD Archive Mss Box 20 (b) pp129-34, dated 26 December 1799
88
HD Archive Mss Box 20 (b) p95
89
JD Memoirs, pp59-66
90
Ibid., pp66-7
91
HD Works 3; Fullmer, p211
92
HD Works 3, pp1-3
93
JD Memoirs, pp54-5
94
Preface to
Researches,
1800, HD Works 3, p2
95
Joseph Cottle,
Reminiscences of S. T. Coleridge and Robert Southey,
1847
96
Treneer, p48
97
The Sceptic,
anon, 1800, British Library catalogue Cup.407.gg.37
98
Golinski, p173
99
Ibid., p153
100
Treneer, p63
101
Paris, vol 1, p58
102
Trevor H. Levere,
Poetry Realized in Nature: Coleridge and Early Nineteenth Century Science,
CUP, 1981, p32
103
See Coleridge to Davy, six letters, 9 October 1800-20 May 1801,
Coleridge Collected Letters,
edited by E.L. Griggs, vols 1-2; see Treneer, pp67-8
104
Coleridge to Davy, 9 October 1800
105
Holmes, p247
106
Coleridge, letter to Davy, 15 July 1800,
Collected Letters,
vol 1, p339. He also added in a chemical vein: ‘I would that I could wrap up the view from my House [Greta Hall] in a pill of opium, & send it to you!’
107
Southey to William Taylor, 20 February 1800; from Fullmer, p148
108
Southey to Coleridge, 3 August 1801; from ibid., pp148-9
109
JD Fragments, pp29-30
110
‘On the Death of Lord Byron’, 1824, Davy,
Memoirs,
pp285-6
111
HD Works 8, p308
112
Fullmer, pp328-32
113
The most revealing evidence is the unpublished letter Anna Beddoes wrote to Davy on 26 December 1806, HD Archive Mss Box 26 File H 9
114
Fullmer, p82
115
Ibid., p281
116
Verse fragments from HD Archive, Ms Notebook 13 J; Box 26 File H; and Fullmer, pp 106-8
117
HD Archive Mss Box 26 File H 7
118
HD Archive Mss Box 26 File H 6, 13 and 14
119
HD Mss Bristol, Davy to John King, 14 November 1801, Ms 32688/33
120
HD Archive Mss Box 13 (g) p116
121
HD Archive Mss Box 13 (g) p158
122
See Stansfield, pp 234-5. Some more light is thrown on Anna’s enigmatic and volatile character by A.C. Todd, ‘Anna Maria, Mother of Thomas Lovell Beddoes’, in
Studia Neophilologica,
29, 1957
123
‘Glenarm, by moonlight, August 1806’, HD Archive Mss Box 13 (g) p166; printed in JD Memoirs, pp50-1
124
HD Archive Mss Box 26 File H 9 and 10
125
JD Fragments, p150
126
Coleridge to Southey, 1803; see Treneer, p114
127
Treneer, p78
128
JB Correspondence 4, letters 1290-6, cover an exchange between Banks, James Watt and the Duchess of Devonshire about the viability of Dr Beddoes’s scheme in December 1794
129
HD Works 3, p276
130
F.F. Cartwright,
The English Pioneers of Anaesthesia,
1952, p311
131
HD,
Researches,
1800, p556; and HD Works 3, p329
132
Holmes, pp222-7
133
Coleridge to Davy, 2 December 1800,
Collected Letters,
vol 1, p648