Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Wonders of Science, or Young Humphry Davy: The Cornish Apothecary's Boy, Who Taught Himself Natural Philosophy, and Eventually Became President of the Royal Society; The Life of a Wonderful Boy, Written for Boys
MY dear sir, - You asked me to give you an account of my first introduction to Sir H. Davy, which I am very happy to do, as I think the circumstance will bear testimony to his goodness of heart.
When I was a bookseller's apprentice, I was very fond of experiment, and very averse to trade. It happened that a gentleman, a member of the Royal Institution, took me to hear some of Sir H. Davy's last lectures in Albemarle Street. I took notes, and afterwards wrote them out more fairly in a quarto volume.
My desire to escape from trade, which I thought vicious and selfish, and to enter into the service of Science, which I imagined made its pursuers amiable and liberal, induced me at last to take the bold and 'simple step of writing to Sir H. Davy, expressing my wishes, and a hope that, if an Opportunity came in his way, he would favour my views; at the same time, I sent the notes I had taken at his lectures.
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