Record

StorageSiteUCL Special Collections
LevelItem
Reference Number MS OGDEN/49
TitleAristotle Commentaries by James Harris
Date18th century
DescriptionCollection of 18th-century commentaries by James Harris on five books of Aristotle and one work on logic, bound in two volumes.

The first volume comprises:
In quatuor libros arlis De Coelo
De Generatione et Corruptione. In duos Aristotelis libros...
De Anima. In tres libros Arlis de Anima (267 folios)
Metaphysica. In Metaphysicos Aristotelis Libros (76 folios + plate).

The second volume comprises:
Ad Logicam Introductio (310 folios + plate)
Ethica Nicomachea. In decem libros Ethicorum ad Nichomachum Commentarii (126 folios).

Each volume has one printed sheet at the back, with the tables "Conclusiones ex universa philosophia" (volume 1) and "Conclusiones Logicae" (volume 2).
Extent2 volumes containing c1200 and 960 leaves respectively
AdminHistoryBorn 1709; educated at the grammar school in Salisbury; entered Wadham College Oxford as a gentleman-commoner; matriculated, 1726; afterwards read law at Lincoln's Inn without intending to practise; on his father's death, became independent, and settled in the family house in Salisbury Close; studied the classics; an active magistrate for the county, living at Salisbury and his house at Durnford in the neighbourhood; encouraged concerts and the annual musical festival at Salisbury; adapted words to selections from Italian and German composers made in two volumes by Joseph Corfe, the Salisbury organist; served in the House of Commons as member for Christchurch, 1761-1780; a follower of George Grenville; became a lord of the Admiralty and a lord of the Treasury, 1763; retired with Grenville, 1765; made secretary and comptroller to the queen, 1774; held no other office; a scholar and author, and an adherent of Aristotelian philosophy; died, 1780; buried in the north aisle of Salisbury Cathedral. Publications: three treatises, firstly on 'Art', secondly on 'Music, Painting, and Poetry', and thirdly on 'Happiness' (1744); 'Hermes, or a Philosophical Inquiry concerning Universal Grammar' (1751; translated into French, 1796); 'Philosophical Arrangements' (1775); 'Philological Inquiries' (1781); added some notes to Sarah Fielding's translation of Xenophon; works, with an account of the author, collected by his son, Lord Malmesbury (1801); 'On Rise and Progress of Criticism, from Papers by J H' (1752) and 'Spring: a Pastoral', represented at Drury Lane in 1762, also attributed to him.
CustodialHistoryPart of the library of Charles Kay Ogden (1889-1957), linguistic psychologist, founder of the Orthological Institute and originator of the language system Basic English, whose interests in language systems are reflected in the subject matter of his collection, which comprised individual manuscripts and manuscript collections dating from the 14th to the 20th century.
AcquisitionPart of the C K Ogden Library acquired by UCL in 1953.
AccessStatusOpen
AccessConditionsThe papers are available subject to the usual conditions of access to Archives and Manuscripts material, after the completion of a Reader's Undertaking.
Related MaterialUniversity College London Special Collections also holds a Greek manuscript transcribed for James Harris (Ref: MS OGDEN 58).

British Library, Manuscript Collections, holds Harris's literary papers, 1768-1770 (Ref: Add MSS 18728-29); letters to the 1st and 2nd Earls of Hardwicke and Charles Yorke, 1752-1779 (Ref: Add MSS 35592-35692 passim); copies of letters to the Reverend Jonathan Toup, 1747-1776 (Ref: Add MS 32565). National Library of Scotland, Manuscripts Division, holds correspondence with Lord Monboddo, 1768-1779 (Ref: Acc 5738). Hampshire Record Office holds miscellaneous correspondence, 1738-1771 (Ref: 9M73); household accounts, 1764-1780. Oxford University, Bodleian Library, Special Collections and Western Manuscripts, holds nine letters to Revd J Williams, 1766-1774 (Ref: MS add c 88). Wiltshire and Swindon Record Office holds letters, 1759-1779 (Ref: WRO 9/35/157).
FindingAidsHandlist at University College London Special Collections.
Add to My Items