Authors: Richard Holmes
Tags: #History, #Modern, #19th Century, #Biography & Autobiography, #Science & Technology, #Science, #Philosophy & Social Aspects, #Fiction
6
JB Correspondence 6, p375
7
Ibid.
8
JB Correspondence 6, 1819
9
Coleridge ‘Youth and Age’ (1825), in
Selected Poems,
Penguin Classics, p215
10
November 1817, JB Correspondence 6, p252
11
Byron, ‘Darkness’, written at the Villa Diodati, July 1816. See Fiona MacCarthy,
Byron: Life and Legend,
John Murray, 2002, p69; and discussed in
New Penguin Romantic Poetry,
edited by Jonathan and Jessica Wordsworth, Notes to Poems, p909
12
JB Correspondence 6, September and November 1819, pp355, 367
13
Gascoigne, p52
14
JB Correspondence 6, March 1818, p276
15
Ibid., November 1818, p325
16
Ibid., September 1819, p359
17
Byron,
Don Juan
(1821), Canto 10, lines 1-24. The ‘glass and vapour’ refer to telescopes and steamships, and also possibly balloons. The ringing phrase ‘In the Wind’s Eye’ was used by modern editors as the title of vol 6 of Byron’s
Collected Letters
18
JB Correspondence 6, August 1816, p209
19
Gascoigne, p41
20
Ibid.
21
Buttman, p13
22
CHM, pp119-21
23
John Herschel to Babbage, October 1813, quoted in Buttman, p14
24
William Herschel to John, 10 November 1813, WH Mss 6278 1/11
25
Lady Herschel to John, 14 November 1813, ibid.
26
John Herschel to Babbage, March 1815, quoted by Buttman, p16
27
JB Correspondence 6, p375
28
Shelley, ‘Notes to Queen Mab’ (1812)
29
Ruston, p154
30
Further discussion in Ruston p208, and Crowe,
Extraterrestrial,
p171
31
Shelley,
Prometheus Unbound,
Act I, lines 163-6
32
Ibid., Act II, lines 52-9
33
Ibid., Act IV, lines 238-44
34
Ibid., lines 457-72
35
Gascoigne, pp257-9
36
JB Correspondence 6, various letters, 1820
37
Gascoigne, pp249-55
38
JB Correspondence 6, August 1819, p352
39
Ibid., November 1819, p367
40
Ibid., February 1820, p379
41
William Edward Parry to ‘My Dearest Parents’, December 1817; from O’Brian, p300
42
JB Correspondence 6, asking for news of Parry, 1818, pp251, 326, 377
43
Ibid., 20 December 1819, p374. The man was of course John Herschel
44
Ibid., Berthollet to Banks, 27 March 1820, pp383-4
45
See his Will, described in O’Brian, Chapter 12
46
Marie Boas Hall,
All Scientists Now,
1984, p18
47
Lockhart,
Life of Sir Walter Scott,
vol 2, 1838, pp40-3
48
HD Works 7, pp5-15
49
Ibid., p21
50
JD Life 2, p126
51
Paris, vol 2, p185
52
Faraday,
Correspondence
1, p183
53
Ibid., pp244-80 passim
54
Hamilton, p192
55
Faraday to Phillips, May 1836, Bence Jones,
Michael Faraday,
1870, vol 1, pp335-9
56
Discussed in Bence Jones, pp335-9, and James Hamilton, pp186-9
57
Holmes,
Shelley,
p410
58
Hartley, p129
59
Ibid., p130
60
Humboldt, ‘Lecture to the Berlin Academy of Sciences’, 1805, quoted in Steven Ruskin,
Herschel’s Cape Voyage,
2004
61
Ibid., pp20-2
62
Ibid., p16
63
Many of these instruments, including the ‘mountain barometer’, in WH Archive; and see Ruskin, p21
64
‘The Garden Days: Marlow 1817’ in Holmes,
Shelley.
If I had been a novelist I would have described Shelley and Mary making a night visitation to the great forty-foot, and getting Caroline to show them Andromeda and other distant constellations, and planning a comet-flight into deep space. See ‘The Witch of Atlas’, 1820
65
CHM, p131. The note is actually dated 4 July 1819
66
CHM, p137
67
WH Chronicle, p363. The second translation is mine
68
Gentleman’s Magazine,
September 1822
69
Ibid.
70
Holmes,
Shelley,
p730
71
Sime, pp259-61
72
WH Chronicle, p359
73
CHM, p163
74
CHM, p171
75
WH Chronicle, p366
76
CHM, p167
77
Caroline Herschel to John, April 1827, British Library Ms Egerton 3761.f45/60; and see J.A. Bennett, ‘The Telescopes of William Herschel’, in
Journal for the History of Astronomy, 7,
June 1976
78
CHM, p163
79
CHM, p 180
80
CHM, p193
81
CHM, p161
82
David S. Evans (editor),
Herschel at the Cape: Letters and Journals of John Herschel,
Texas, 1969, pxxi
83
CHM, p168
84
Thorpe, p222
85
Treneer, p208
86
Ibid., pp206-12
87
Ibid., p208
88
The Harringtonian System of Chemistry,
1819, quoted in Golinski, p217
89
‘The Humbugs of the Age’, in
John Bull Magazine,
1, 1824, British Library catalogue PP.5950
90
Evans, pxxx
91
Treneer, p207
92
JD Memoirs, p346
93
JD Fragments, p289
94
JD Memoirs, pp334-6
95
HD Works 9, pp13-14
96
Salmonia,
Day 4, HD Works 9, pp66-7
97
JD Fragments, p258
98
Salmonia,
Day 4, HD Works 9, p66
99
HD Archive Mss Box 25/51
100
HD Archive Mss Box 25/61
101
Consolations,
Dialogue IV, HD Works 9, pp314-15
102
Paris, vol 2, p306
103
Tom Poole to John Davy, c. 1835, in Paris, vol 2, p307
104
Paris, vol 2, p309
105
HD Archive Mss Box 25/73, 74, 75. On 25 January 1829: ‘I hope I may wear on till the spring & see May in Illyria. I have now constant pain in the region of the heart.’ Box 25/84
106
HD Archive Mss Box 25/73; and Lamont-Brown, pp157-63
107
HD Archive Mss Box 25/90
108
HD Archive Mss Box 25/74, letter, 2 November 1828
109
HD Archive Mss Box 25/75, letter, 3 December 1828
110
HD Archive Mss Box 26, File B/17
111
HD Archive Mss Box 25/83
112
JD Fragments, p265
113
Davy’s two unpublished poems to Josephine Dettela can be found in HD Archive Mss Box 14 (e) pp128-30
114
Based on local information provided by Professor Dr Janez Batis of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences, for David Knight,
Humphry Davy: Vision and Power,
Blackwell Science Biographies, 1992, pp180, 260
115
JD Fragments, p293
116
Thorpe, p232
117
HD Archive Mss Box 25/87a
118
Fullmer, p350
119
Consolations,
Dialogue I, HD Works 9, p233
120
Ibid., pp233-6
121
Ibid., pp237-8
122
Ibid., p240
123
Ibid., pp239-47
124
Ibid., pp236-47, 266, 274
125
Ibid., Dialogue II, p266
126
Ibid., pp274, 254-6
127
Ibid., Dialogue III, pp302-3
128
Ibid., Dialogue II, pp304-8
129
Ibid., Dialogue III, p309
130
Ibid., p308
131
Ibid., Dialogue IV, p316
132
Ibid., pp320-1
133
Undated extract from Davy’s lecture notebooks, JD Memoirs, p147
134
Consolations,
Dialogue V, HD Works 9, pp361-5
135
Ibid., pp364-6
136
Ibid., pp365-6
137
Ibid., Dialogue VI, p382
138
Janet Browne,
Charles Darwin,
vol 1, 2003, p30
139
JD Memoirs, 1839
140
John Tobin,
Journal of a Tour whilst accompanying the late Sir Humphry Davy,
1832, p5
141
JD Fragments, p268
142
JD Fragments, to Jane, September 1827, p296
143
HD Archive Mss Box 25/80, to Jane, 1 September 1828
144
John Herschel,
On the Study of Natural Philosophy,
1830, pp342-4 and footnote
145
HD Archive Mss Box 14 (M) pp105-6
146
JD Fragments, Jane to Davy, late March 1829, p313
147
John Davy’s affectionate account, in JD Memoirs, p412
148
JD Memoirs, p408
Chapter 10: Young Scientists
1
In a series of gloomy articles, e.g.
The Times,
28 June 1832. See Marie Boas Hall,
All Scientists Now,
CUP, 1984
2
Edinburgh Review,
49, 1829, pp439-59; and Hamilton, p270
3
Thomas Carlye,
Sartor Resartus,
1833
4
Anthony Hyman, ‘Charles Babbage: Science and Reform’, in
Cambridge Scientific Minds,
edited by Peter Harman and Simon Mitton, CUP, 2002
5
Charles Babbage,
The Decline of Science in England,
1830, p102
6
Ibid., p152
7
Ibid., p44
8
Ibid., p102
9
Ibid., p174
10
Ibid., pp203-12
11
Ibid., p210