“Exhibition of the Laughing Gas”, an wood-engraving from ca.1840. most likely used as an informative poster at one of the many itinerant exhibitions showcasing the effects of laughing gas.
Featured on PDR in the essay “O, Excellent Air Bag”: Humphry Davy and Nitrous Oxide
The summer of 1799 saw a new fad take hold in one remarkable circle of British society: the inhalation of "Laughing Gas". The overseer and pioneer of these experiments was a young Humphry Davy, future President of the Royal Society. Mike Jay explores how Davy's extreme and near-fatal regime of self-experimentation with the gas not only marked a new era in the history of science but a turn toward the philosophical and literary romanticism of the century to come.