Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Creating RomanticismHumphry Davy and the Sublime

Creating Romanticism: Humphry Davy and the Sublime [This chapter explores the poetry and the science of the chemist Hum phry Davy and his fascination with the sublime. In the work of Davy during and beyond the 1790s there is a special relationship between poetry and chemistry. When Coleridge asks ‘What is poetry?’ and ‘what is a poet?’ in his Biographia Literaria he uses a number of terms in his answer to this question that are to be found in contemporary chemistry and which may well be the result of his earlier connection with Davy (Biographia, VII; II, 15). Specifically, Coleridge uses the word ‘sublime’ as a verb in Biographia to describe the poetic imagination, making reference to the chemical process of sublimation. Chemical metaphors help Coleridge to define his understanding of poetry. His friend Humphry Davy, poet and chemist, similarly sees a connection, using the aesthetic category of the ‘sublime’ as an adjective to describe the discipline of chemistry itself. Davy appropriates the sublime for science in this period because of its association with grandeur, awe, power, and for the role played by the imagination, fear, and pleasure.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

Loading next page...
 
/lp/springer-journals/creating-romanticism-humphry-davy-and-the-sublime-fFcyUi20Ic
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan UK
Copyright
© Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited 2013
ISBN
978-1-349-44295-9
Pages
132 –174
DOI
10.1057/9781137264299_5
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[This chapter explores the poetry and the science of the chemist Hum phry Davy and his fascination with the sublime. In the work of Davy during and beyond the 1790s there is a special relationship between poetry and chemistry. When Coleridge asks ‘What is poetry?’ and ‘what is a poet?’ in his Biographia Literaria he uses a number of terms in his answer to this question that are to be found in contemporary chemistry and which may well be the result of his earlier connection with Davy (Biographia, VII; II, 15). Specifically, Coleridge uses the word ‘sublime’ as a verb in Biographia to describe the poetic imagination, making reference to the chemical process of sublimation. Chemical metaphors help Coleridge to define his understanding of poetry. His friend Humphry Davy, poet and chemist, similarly sees a connection, using the aesthetic category of the ‘sublime’ as an adjective to describe the discipline of chemistry itself. Davy appropriates the sublime for science in this period because of its association with grandeur, awe, power, and for the role played by the imagination, fear, and pleasure.]

Published: Oct 12, 2015

Keywords: Nitrous Oxide; Active Power; Natural Object; Collect Work; Philosophical Enquiry

There are no references for this article.