Humphry Davy: Laughing Gas, Literature and the Lamp
A free online course , organised by Lancaster University, will examine one of the best-known men of science of the nineteenth century. Sir Humphry Davy (1778-1829) was a chemist who was also a poet in the days before culture was divided into science and the arts. The course will examine his contribution to both. He was the first person to inhale nitrous oxide, he isolated nine chemical elements and, most famously, he invented the miners' safety lamp, known as the Davy lamp. This course will consider Davy's life and career using his manuscript notebooks and chemical apparatus held at the Royal Institution of Great Britain. Participants will read Davy's letters, his poetry and even watch the recreation of one of his most dangerous experiments! Lead Educator is Professor Sharon Ruston, from Lancaster University's Department of English Literature and Creative Writing. She is currently co-editing The Collected Letters of Sir Humphry Davy , to be published in four volumes by Oxford University Press in 2018.



