Authors: Richard Holmes
Tags: #History, #Modern, #19th Century, #Biography & Autobiography, #Science & Technology, #Science, #Philosophy & Social Aspects, #Fiction
British Association for the Advancement of Science: proposed and founded, xix, 440, 446; early meetings, 446-50, 452, 460; women attend, 447, 452; public and press reception, 452-3; women members, 459-60
British Balloon Club, 137, 147
British Library (new), 404n
British Museum: Davy’s trusteeship, 403-4
Brock, Claire:
Comet Sweeper: Caroline Herschel’s Astronomical Ambition,
201n
Brontë, Anne:
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall,
455
Brougham, Henry
(later
Baron), 299
Brown, Dr John, 255
Browne, Sir Thomas, 321
Bryan, Margaret, 179
Buchan, Alexander, 13-15, 44
Buckland, William, 447, 452, 460
Buddle, John, 361-3, 368-9, 372, 375
Buffon, Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de, 204
Bullman, Mrs (Herschel’s Bath neighbour), 82
Burch, Druin:
Digging up the Dead,
284n
Burney, Charles, 136, 140, 166, 174-5
Burney, Esther, 306
Burney, Fanny (Mme d’Arblay), 41, 50, 174-6, 188; mastectomy without anaesthetic, 283, 305-6
Burns, Robert, 213
Burton, Robert:
Anatomy of Melancholy,
323
Byron, George Gordon, 6th Baron, 205, 250, 276, 307, 318, 327, 338, 378, 380, 384-5, 431, 457;
The Bride of Abydos,
350;
Childe Harold,
250; ‘Darkness’, 383;
Don Juan,
350, 380, 385
Cabanis, Pierre, 322
Calais: monument to first balloon crossing of Channel, 151-2
caloric (supposed element), 250, 277
Cambridge: third British Association meeting (1833), 447-50, 452
Camden, John Jeffreys Pratt, 1st Marquess of, 223, 226, 231
Cameron, Julia Margaret, 465
Campbell, Thomas, 209-10, 409
Cape Town: John Herschel and family in, 462-5
carbon dioxide: in respiration, 245-6
carbon monoxide, 257-8
Carlile, Richard, 336;
Address to the Men of Science,
336
Carlisle, Sir Anthony, 245, 274, 283
Carlyle, Thomas:
Signs of the Times,
435
Cassini, Jacques, 101, 181
Cavallo, Tiberius, 143, 168, 171
Cavendish, Henry: and discovery of Uranus, 101; discovers hydrogen with Priestley, 127, 133, 158; and ballooning, 134, 158; analyses upper atmosphere, 147-8; visits Herschel, 199; Marie-Anne Paulze (Lavoisier) translates, 248; interviews Davy for Royal Institution post, 277; and founding of Royal Institution, 285; in Walker’s composite portrait, 303; in Mary Shelley’s
Frankenstein,
328; Davy praises, 344
Chalmers, Thomas, 447, 452;
Discourses on Astronomy,
209
Chambers, Neil, 57n
Chapman, George, 206
Charles, Alexandre, 126, 131-3, 146-7, 152
Charlotte, Queen of George III, 174, 177-9
Charlotte Augusta Matilda, Princess Royal, 111, 177
Châtelet, Gabrielle-Émilie, Marquise du, 179, 201n
chemistry: Davy’s interest in, 244, 247, 254-5, 257, 275; Lavoisier’s eminence in, 248; attacked as charlatanry, 273; Davy lectures on, 288; and electricity, 296; Davy writes on, 343-5, 355; Davy claims as crown of liberal education, 430; John Herschel idealises, 444
Chenevix, Richard, 328-9
child labour: Victorian control of, 375
Christianson, Gale:
Edwin Hubble: Mariner of the Nebulae,
84n, 119n
City Philosophical Society, 352, 358, 363
Clanny, Dr William, 351, 363, 370-1, 375
Clarke, Charles Cowden, 206-7
Clay Hall, near Windsor, 164
Clayfield, William, 257-8, 294
Clerke, Captain Charles, 53
Clift, William, 307
climate change: in early nineteenth century, 383
Cline, Henry, 306-7, 316
clouds: classified, 159-60
coal mines: fire-damp danger, 351, 361, 370;
see also
miners’ safety lamp
Coal Mines Safety Committee, 361, 363
Coates, Mr (of Bristol), 265
Cockney School of poets, 318
Coke, Lady Mary, 41, 43
Coleridge, Revd John, 111
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor: on scientific endeavour, 48n; on Banks as source of drugs, 56; published by Johnson, 106, 271; shown night sky as child, 111-12; moon and star imagery in poems, 113n; on clouds, 160; on ballooning, 161; stands godfather to Wordsworth’s son John, 203n; on concept of the infinite, 205n; and redemption by vision of life, 220; regional roots, 236; and Pantisocracy, 252; friendship with Davy, 266-8, 448; inhales nitrous oxide, 267; on psychosomaticism, 267, 315n; ‘conversation poems’, 268, 316; influence on Davy, 268, 270, 276; and Davy’s experiments on galvanism, 274; scientific observations, 274; on Davy’s romantic attachments, 281; on pain, 282-3, 417; and Davy’s view of therapeutic value of science, 290; on ‘the One Life’, 291, 316; on Davy’s success in London, 292-3, 340; opium addiction, 292, 297, 307-8; on Mediterranean tour, 293, 295; Davy invites to lecture at Royal Institution, 295, 297; returns from Mediterranean, 297; lectures on ‘Poetry and the Imagination’ at Royal Institution, 299-300, 467; and Beddoes’s death, 302; on effect of celebrity on Davy, 304; treated by Abernethy, 307-8, 311; with Gillman in Highgate, 308, 321-2; on ‘science of mind’, 314; absent from Haydon’s ‘Immortal Dinner’, 318, 320; letter from Southey on Davy’s rejection of poetry, 320; understands formation of rainbow, 320-1; in Vitalism debate, 321-2; on evolution, 322; and ‘Theory of Life’, 322; edits
The Friend,
340; estrangement from Davy, 340, 346; quarrel with Wordsworth, 340; on Davy’s contribution to science, 345-6; and Davy’s philosophical speculations, 357; on chance and inspiration in Davy’s scientific discoveries, 367-8; on steamships, 382; depicted in Davy’s
Salmonia,
417; on Newton and Shakespeare, 429 & n; on new poetry, 438n; effect of poetry on John Stuart Mill, 441; attends Cambridge meeting of British Association, 448; friendship with Faraday, 448-9; obituary, 460;
The Ancient Mariner,
18n, 112, 219-20;
Biographia Literaria,
431, 449; ‘Christabel’, 266;
Church and State,
205n; ‘Does Fortune Favour Fools?’, 367; ‘Kubla Khan’, 59, 267;
Lyrical Ballads
(with Wordsworth), 254, 268, 275, 283, 291;
Notebooks,
274, 321; ‘Notes Towards a New Theory of Life’ (with Gillman), 321;
Philosophical Lectures,
xvi; ‘The Three Graves’, 212; ‘Youth and Age’, 382
Colonial Office: finances Mungo Park’s second expedition, 222, 231
combustion, 245, 247
Comet,
HMS, 412
comets: Caroline Herschel discovery of, 171-4, 176, 188, 193; nature of, 172
Commerson, Philibert, 3, 11
computers: Babbage devises early machine, 437-8
Condillac, Étienne Bonnot de, 249
Condorcet, M.J.A.N. de Caritat, Marquis de, 125, 128;
Life of Voltaire,
261
Conduit, John, xviiin
Connaissance des Temps, La
(annual), 88n, 124, 172, 175-6
Conrad, Joseph, 220;
Heart of Darkness,
228n
consciousness, 322
Constable, John: cloud paintings, 160
Conte, Nicolas, 156
Cook, Captain James: commands
Endeavour
voyage, xvi, 3-6, 9-11, 13; wariness of venereal disease, 4, 18; on
Niger
expedition, 9; and seaman’s suicide on
Endeavour,
14; security on Tahiti, 15-16; activities in Tahiti, 20, 23, 35; observes Transit of Venus, 21; on sexual practices in Tahiti, 26; impounds Tahitian canoes, 27-8; circumnavigates Tahiti, 29-32; takes Tahitian hostages, 34; explores New Zealand and Australia, 38 & n; on civilised and indigenous peoples, 39; praised on return from voyage, 42-3; journal appropriated by officials, 44; second Pacific expedition
(Resolution,
1772), 46-7; third Pacific expedition (1777), 61; invites James Lind on second voyage, 121n; killed in Hawaii, 53-4; Charles Darwin studies voyages,
461; Journal of Captain Cook’s Last Voyage to the Pacific Ocean
(ed. John Rickman), 53;
A Voyage Towards the South Pole and Round the World,
51
Cooke, T.P., 334-5
Cooper, Astley, 306-7, 316, 323
Copernicus, Nikolaus, 205, 247
Cornwall, 236-8, 268, 350
Cottle, Joseph, 251, 254, 256, 258-9, 263-4
Courier
(newspaper), 408
Coutelle, Carles, 156
Coutts & Co. (bankers), 251
Cowper, William, 51;
The Task
(poem), 51-2
craniology, 310-11
Creation, xviii, 91, 198, 451, 454, 459
Crick, Francis, 373n
Croker, John Wilson, 405
Crosse, Andrew, 419-20
Crowe, Michael J.:
The Extraterrestrial Life Debate,
168n
Cruikshank, George, 453
Cumberland, William Augustus, Duke of, 69
Cuvier, Georges Léopold Chrétien Frédéric Dagobert, Baron, 7, 57, 306, 310, 312, 353, 430, 439, 454
Dalton, John, 236, 247, 303, 394, 399, 447, 448
Darwin, Caroline, 461
Darwin, Charles: voyages on
Beagle,
xvi, 438, 446-7, 455, 461; visits Tahiti, 59n; posits other possible solar systems, 106-7; on biological evolution, 204; theory of evolution by natural selection, 313, 451 & n, 461; refers to Davy’s
Consolations in Travel,
430; influenced by John Herschel’s
Study of Natural Philosophy,
445, 461; at Cambridge, 460-1; visits Herschels in Cape Town, 462-3; achievements, 468;
On the Origin of Species,
445, 451
Darwin, Erasmus: friendship with Joseph Wright of Derby, xix; on Pilâtre’s death, 155; on early balloonists, 161; on Herschel’s view of cosmos, 197-8; friendship with Beddoes, 250; Coleridge on, 322; and artificial generation of life, 327; and plausibility of
Frankenstein,
328; and ‘voice of Love’, 379; Mary Shelley on, 457;
The Botanic Garden,
92, 106, 107n, 193, 197, 344
Datchet, near Windsor, 111, 114, 117
Davy, Edmund (Humphry’s cousin), 298n
Davy, Grace
(née
Millet; Humphry’s mother), 237-9, 250, 253, 259, 266, 268, 343, 397, 412, 414
Davy, Sir Humphry: discoveries, xx; on Herschel’s discovery of infra-red light, 199; praises Hypatia of Alexandria, 201n, 248; appearance and character, 235-6, 239, 359; Banks’s interest in, 235; poetry, 235, 240, 242, 243, 254, 259-60, 265-6, 268-9, 275-6, 279-80, 300, 354, 360, 378-9, 415-16, 518, 522-3; spoken French, 235, 242; background and upbringing, 236-40, 243; story-telling, 239; apprenticed to Borlase (surgeon-apothecary), 241; career at Royal Institution, 241n, 272, 277, 285, 292; reading, 242-3; early writings, 243, 254-5, 272; keeps diary and notebook, 243-5, 270, 275, 298, 357; interest in chemistry, 244-5, 247, 254-5, 257, 275; on alchemists, 247-8; influenced by Lavoisier, 248-9; early chemical experiments, 249-50; works with Beddoes at Pneumatic Institute, 252-3, 255-9, 263; on human consciousness and physiology, 254-5; near-death from inhaling carbon monoxide, 257-8; experiments with nitrous oxide, 258-67, 269-70, 281, 315n, 348; experiments on self, 258-62, 269-70; friendship and correspondence with Southey, 265, 293; forms friendship with Coleridge, 266-8, 293, 448; first visit to London, 267; belief in science, 268; uses Watt’s portable gas chamber, 269; philosophical and intellectual speculation, 270, 357, 360-1, 424-30, 450; experiments on animals, 271; self-criticism and reappraisal of scientific method, 272; attacked and satirised, 273; interest in electricity, 273-4, 295-6; attracted to Anna Beddoes, 278-81, 288; romantic experiences, 281; and anaesthetic potential of nitrous oxide, 282, 284; leaves Bristol for London, 285; lectures and demonstrations, 285-92, 294-9, 304, 309, 325, 337, 340, 343; publishes papers in Royal Society’s
Philosophical Transactions,
286; addiction to nitrous oxide, 287; hints at romantic entanglements, 287-8; success and reputation, 287, 291, 303-4, 438; walking in Wales, 287; on philosophy and romance of science, 288-90; avoids revolutionary declaration, 289-90; attractivenes to young women, 291-2, 337; in cartoons by Rowlandson and Gillray, 291-2; influence on Coleridge and Wordsworth, 291; elected Fellow of Royal Society, 292; salary and payments, 292; and death of Gregory Watt, 293; and idea of soul, 294; awarded Royal Society’s Copley Medal, 295; invites Coleridge to lecture at Royal Institution, 295, 297, 299; visits Lake District, 295; fly-fishing and angling, 297, 337, 346, 349-60, 356, 359, 361, 377, 398, 413-14, 416; patriotism, 297; awards and honours, 299, 352; seriously ill with jail fever, 299, 301; hallucination of beautiful unknown woman, 301, 377-8, 425, 427; and Beddoes’s death, 302; in Walker’s composite portrait, 303; meets and falls for Jane Apreece, 304, 337-41; and Vitalism, 309-10, 421, 428, 431; on ‘mystery’ in life, 313n, 467; interest in Ritter, 328, 330; engagement and marriage to Jane, 342-3; knighthood, 342-3; honeymoon in Scotland, 346; eye injured in explosion, 347-8; research on explosives for war effort, 347; marriage relations, 348-50, 375-6, 397, 400-1, 412-14, 431; friendship with Byron, 350; Continental tour (1813-15), 352-5; first analyses iodine with Gay-Lussac, 353-4; writes on limits of contemporary scientific research, 355-6; investigates natural gases in Italy, 356-7; appointed Vice-President of Royal Institution, 358; buys house in Mayfair, 359; on eternal physical laws, 360; investigates fire-damp in coal mines, 361-4; develops safety lamp for miners, 364-70; awarded Rumford Medal from Royal Society, 369; baronetcy, 369; Stephenson disputes priority in developing safety lamp, 371-4; honoured in Newcastle, 374; two-year European tour with Jane (1818-20), 375-81; childlessness, 376; temper, 376; and Banks’s final illness and death, 380, 397; in Byron’s
Don Juan,
380; buys house in Park Street, 397; elected President of Royal Society, 397-401; shooting holiday with Sir Walter Scott, 398; revisits Penzance, 400-1; clumsy handling of Royal Society committee meetings, 401; jealousy of Faraday, 402; supposed involvement in laboratory injury to Faraday, 402-3; public activities and offices, 403-5; investigates copper hull corrosion on naval ships, 411-14; unpopularity at Royal Society, 412; satirised and mocked, 413; socialising, 413; Continental tour with brother John (1827), 414-15; heart disease and strokes, 414, 432-3; and mother’s death, 414, 428; resigns presidency of Royal Society, 419; final Continental tour (1828), 420-1; takes morphine, 420, 433; nursed by Josephine Dettela in Laibach, 421-3; sends late papers to Royal Society, 431-2; death, 433, 435; estate and bequests, 433-4; Babbage’s view of, 439; researches into electricity, 444; accepts Natural Theology, 450; on evolution, 455; Mary Somerville writes on, 458; ‘The Chemical Philosopher’, 249;
Collected Works
(ed. John Davy), 434;
Consolations in Travel,
248, 294, 356, 378, 424-33, 450;
Elements of Chemical Philosophy,
343-5, 356-7; ‘Essays on Heat and Light’, 250;
On the Safety Lamp for Coal Miners, with Some Researches into Flame,
370;
Researches Chemical and Philosophical,
264, 270-1, 277, 279, 281-4;
Salmonia, or Days of Fly-Fishing,
262, 416-20, 423-4, 432