Page 69 of The Age of Wonder


  60 WH Archive: miniature on ivory of Mary Herschel by J. Kernan, 1805; also reproduced in Hoskin, p97

  61 Hoskin, pp91-4

  62 WH to Alexander, 7 February 1788, from WH Chronicle, p178

  63 Hoskin, p92

  64 Journal of Mrs Papendiek, WH Chronicle, p174

  65 Ibid.

  66 CHM, pl78

  67 WH Chronicle, p175

  68 CHM, p79

  69 CHA, p96

  70 CHM, p79

  71 WH Mss 6268 4/3

  72 CHA, p57

  73 CHM, pp78, 96

  74 WH Chronicle, p177

  75 Simon Schaffer, ‘Uranus and Herschel’s Astronomy’, Journal for the History of Astronomy, 12, 1981, p22

  76 Hoskin, p106

  77 CHM, p83

  78 CHM, p82

  79 ‘Description of a Forty Foot reflecting Telescope’ (June 1795), WH Papers 1, pp486, 512-26

  80 Ibid.

  81 WH Chronicle, p168

  82 Ibid.

  83 CHM, pl68

  84 Hoskin, p111

  85 Ibid.

  86 WH Papers 2 (1815), pp542-6

  87 ‘Catalogue of a Second Thousand Nebulae’, 1789, WH Papers 1, pp329-37

  88 Simon Schaffer, ‘On the Nebular Hypothesis’, in History, Humanity and Evolution, edited by J.R. Moore, 1988

  89 Hoskin, p167

  90 Broadsheet cartoon by R Hawkins, Soho, February 1790; reproduced in Hoskin, p107

  91 CHM, p95

  92 Ibid.

  93 CHM, p96

  94 Ibid.

  95 CHM, p98

  96 CHA, p123

  97 Barthélemy Faujas de Saint-Fond, Travels in England and Scotland for the Purpose of Examining the Arts and the Sciences, vol 1, 1799, pp65-78; see Brock, p173

  98 WH Papers 1, p423

  99 Erasmus Darwin, Botanic Garden, Part I, Canto IV (Air), lines 371-88

  100 Ibid., note to line 398

  101 Crowe, 1986, pp79-80

  102 Pierre Laplace quoted in Simon Schaffer, ‘On the Nebular Hypothesis’, op. cit.

  103 Quoted in Crowe, 1986, p78

  104 ‘On the Nature and Construction of the Sun’, 1795, WH Papers 1, pp470-84; and ‘Observations tending to investigate the Nature of the Sun’, 1801, WH Papers 2, pp147-80. See also discussion in Crowe, 1986, pp66-7

  105 See Vincent Cronin, The View of the Planet Earth, 1981, p173

  106 ‘On the Solar and Terrestrial Rays that occasion Heat’, 1800, WH Papers 2, pp77-146; see Hoskin, p99

  107 Humphry Davy to Davies Giddy, 3 July 1800, in JA. Paris, Davy, vol 1, p87

  108 Hoskin, p101

  109 British Public Characters of 1798, 1801, British Library catalogue 10818.d. I

  110 WH Chronicle, pp309–11; Beattie, Life of Campbell, 1860, vol 2, pp234-9; Sime, pp206-9

  111 Hoskin, p106

  112 CHM, pp259-60

  113 CHM, p259

  114 Gunther Buttman, Shadow of the Telescope, 1974, p8

  115 This wooden plane can be seen in the Herschel House Museum, Bath

  116 Buttman, op. cit., p11

  117 WH Chronicle, p281

  118 Michael Hoskin, William Herschel and the Construction of the Heavens, 1963, p130

  119 WH Chronicle, pp278-9

  120 WH Papers 2, ‘On the Proper Motion of the Solar System’

  121 WH Papers 2, pp460-97, with illustrations of different nebulae shapes

  122 WH Papers 2, Astronomical Observations’, 1811, p460; and discussed by Armitage, Herschel, pp117-20; and Hoskin, Stellar Astronomy, 1982, p152

  123 WH Papers 1, ‘The Construction of the Heavens’, 1785; and WH Chronicle, p183

  124 Byron, Detached Thoughts, 1821

  125 Byron, Letters, to Piggot, December 1813; and Crowe, Extraterrestrial, p170

  126 Bonnycastle, Astronomy, 1811, Preface, ppv-vi

  127 Charles Cowden Clarke, Recollections, 1861; see also Andrew Motion, Keats, pp108-12

  128 I owe this vivid suggestion to Dr Percy Harrison, Head of Science, Eton

  129 The idea of a sacred, piercing moment of vision into the true nature of the cosmos is also traditional in earlier eighteenth-century poetry. See the strange prose poem by the Northumberland rector James Hervey, Contemplations on the Night, 1747

  130 Simon Schaffer, ‘Herschel on Matter Theory’, Journal for the History of Astronomy, June 1980

  131 WH Papers 2, pp520-41; and WH Chronicle, p287

  132 WH Papers 2, p541

  133 William Whewell, On the Plurality of Worlds, 1850, edited by Michael Crowe, 2001

  134 Herschel to Banks, 10 June 1802, in JB Correspondence 5, p199, where Herschel offers the term ‘asteroid’ reluctantly — ‘not exactly the thing we want’ — from a suggestion by the antiquary Rev Steven Weston, though fully aware that the recently discovered Pallas and Ceres were not ‘baby stars’. The usage is nonetheless dated to Herschel 1802 by the OED.

  135 Thomas Campbell quoted in WH Chronicle, p335

  136 David Brewster, Life of Sir Isaac Newton, 1831

  Chapter 5: Mungo Park in Africa

  1 Sir Harold Carter, Sir Joseph Banks 1743-1820, British Museum, Natural History, 1988, p425; and Gascoigne, Banks and the Enlightenment, p19

  2 JB Letters, p609n; and Hector Cameron, Sir Joseph Banks, 1952, p144

  3 Cameron, p88

  4 As described in Anthony Sattin, The Gates of Africa: Death, Discovery and the Search for Timbuktu, HarperCollins, 2003

  5 The Life of Mungo Park, by HB (anon), 1835, p284

  6 Sattin, pp134-6

  7 Ibid., pp136-7

  8 Mungo Park, Travels in the Interior of Africa, 1799, 1860. The edition used here is Travels, Nonesuch, 2005, p16

  9 Sattin, p140

  10 Travels, p19

  11 Ibid., p31

  12 Sattin, p143

  13 Banks to Park, winter 1795, in ibid., p141

  14 Travels, p95

  15 Ibid., p98

  16 Ibid., p138

  17 Ibid., p141

  18 Ibid.

  19 The Life of Mungo Park, by HB (anon),1835, pp289-90; also Sattin, p168

  20 Travels, pp168-9

  21 Ibid., p169

  22 Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Ancient Mariner, 1798, Part IV

  23 Joseph Conrad, Geography and Some Explorers, 1924, pp28-9

  24 JB Correspondence 4, Banks to Sir William Hamilton, 14 March 1798, p540

  25 Ibid., no.1484, Banks to Johann Blumenbach, 19 September 1798, p554

  26 Ibid., no.1513, Blumenbach to Banks, 12 June 1799, p590

  27 Walter Scott’s meeting with Park 1804; described in The Life of Mungo Park, by HB (anon), 1835, ‘Addenda’; and Sattin, p235

  28 JB Letters, no. 78, Banks to Lord Liverpool, 8 June 1799, p209

  29 Kenneth Lupton, Mungo Park African Traveller, OUP, 1979, p146. Lupton was the one-time District Officer at Boussa, and knew the African locations well

  30 Ibid., p158

  31 Travels, ‘Journal of Second Journey’, pp264-5

  32 Ibid., p271

  33 Park Mss, Martyn to Megan, 1 November 1805, BL Add Mss 37232.f63

  34 Travels, ‘Journal of Second Journey’, p272

  35 Park Mss, Park to Lord Camden, 17 November 1805, BL Add Mss 37232.f65; see also Park’s letter to Allison Park’s father, 10 November 1805, BL Add Mss 33230.f37; and Lupton, p175

  36 Travels, p274

  37 Park Mss, Park to Joseph Banks, 16 November 1805, BL Add Mss 37232.k.f64

  38 Alfred Tennyson, ‘Timbucto’ (poem), 1827

  39 Lupton, Appendix of Later Accounts’ from Isaaco, Amadi Fatouma, Richard Lander and several subsequent Niger explorers

  40 Thomas Park to Allison Park, dated Accra September 1727, from Joseph Thomson, Mungo Park and the Niger, 1890, pp241-2

  41 Richard Lander’s report 1827, reprinted in Stephen Gwynn, Mungo Park and the Quest for the Niger, 1932, p233

  42 Percy Bysshe Shelley, Alastor, or The Spirit of Solitude, 1815
, lines 140-9

  43 Thomas Love Peacock, Crotchet Castle, 1830; see Holmes, Shelley: The Pursuit, 1974, p292

  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) pi 18

  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, pi 19

  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, ppl-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, pp106-8

  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

  134 Paris, vol 1, p97

  135 Cartwright, p320

  136 Bristol Mirror, 9 January 1847, from ibid., p317

  137 JD Memoirs, pp80–1

  138 Philosophical Magazine, May-June 1801, from Treneer, p78

  139 David Knight, essay in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. It is curious that no essential improvement has taken place in the design of chemical batteries since the nineteenth century, and this is currently the greatest single obstacle to the efficient global use of solar energy from solar panels. (Conversation with Richard Mabey on the banks of the river Waveney, midsummer’s day 2008.)

  140 Dorothy A. Stansfield, Thomas Beddoes MD: Chemist, Physician, Democrat, Reidel Publishing, Boston, 1984, pp120, 234–42; also J.E. Stock, Memoirs of Thomas Beddoes, 1811

  141 HD Mss Bristol, Davy to John King, 22 June 1801, Ms 32688/31

  142 HD Mss Bristol, Davy to John King, 14 November 1801, Ms 32688/33

  143 Ibid.

  144 Coleridge, Letters, 1802

  145 HD Works 2, pp311-26

  146 Ibid., p314

  147 Ibid. pp318-19

  148 Ibid., p321

  149 Ibid., p323

  150 Ibid.

  151 Ibid., p326

  152 Preface, Lyrical Ballads, 1802. See discussion in Mary Midgley, Science and Poetry, Routledge, 2001