'[the father of C.H. Rolph] read diligently through a list of the "Hundred Best Books" compiled in 1886 by Sir John Lubbock. "It included nearly all of the books that one didn't want to read or gave up if one tried", Rolph recalled: "Aristotle's Ethics, The Koran, Xenophon's Memorabilia, The Nibelunglied, Schiller's William Tell; and it ended with 'Dickens's Pickwick and David Copperfield' (only) but 'Scott's novels' (apparently the lot). For the most part they were the books which it seemed, you should expect to find in every intelligent man's private library; with, in most such libraries, their leaves uncut'.
Century: 1850-1899 Reader/Listener/Group: Rolph Print: Book
Adrian Johns recounts how, in a dream "at around the time of the outbreak of the Civil War," Henry More saw "a series of huge figures in the sky," including "that of an old man with a long beard ... [who] made a number of gestures with his arm," and how More "[adduced] 'reasons out of Aristotles Mechanicks, which I had very lately read,' for the precise nature of the movements."
Century: 1600-1699 Reader/Listener/Group: Henry More Print: Book
'In 1568 [Gabriel] Harvey purchased a copy of Aristotle's "Organon"; in 1572 he was given a copy of Aristotle's "Rhetoric". Both Greek texts were copiously annotated and thus indicate that they were carefully studied.'
Century: 1500-1599 Reader/Listener/Group: Gabriel Harvey Print: Book
'In 1568 [Gabriel] Harvey purchased a copy of Aristotle's "Organon"; in 1572 he was given a copy of Aristotle's "Rhetoric". Both Greek texts were copiously annotated and thus indicate that they were carefully studied.'
Century: 1500-1599 / 1600-1699 Reader/Listener/Group: Gabriel Harvey Print: Book
Elizabeth Barrett to Hugh Stuart Boyd, 10 March 1842:
'I have read of Aristotle, only His poetics, his ethics & his work upon rhetoric -- but I mean to
take him regularly into both hands when I finish Plato's last page.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett Print: Book
Elizabeth Barrett to Hugh Stuart Boyd, 10 March 1842:
'I have read of Aristotle, only His poetics, his ethics & his work upon rhetoric -- but I mean to
take him regularly into both hands when I finish Plato's last page.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett Print: Book
Elizabeth Barrett to Hugh Stuart Boyd, 10 March 1842:
'I have read of Aristotle, only His poetics, his ethics & his work upon rhetoric -- but I mean to
take him regularly into both hands when I finish Plato's last page.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett Print: Book
Entries in E. M. Forster, Commonplace Book (1926) include passage on character in tragedy from Aristotle, Poetics.
Century: 1900-1945 Reader/Listener/Group: Edward Morgan Forster Print: Book
George Grote to George W. Norman (April 1817):
'I send you down the best "Lucretius" I have [...] Though the reasoning is generally indistinct, and in some places unintelligible, yet in those passages where he indulges his vein of poetry without reserve, the sublimity of his conceptions and the charm and elegance of his language are such as I have hardly ever seen equalled [...] I likewise send you the Tragedies attributed to Seneca, which I think I have heard you express an inclination to read. I have read one or two of them, and they appeared to me not above mediocrity. ****
'I am now studying Aristotle's "Nicomachean Ethics." His reasonings on the subject of morals are wonderfully just and penetrating, and I feel anxious, as I read on, for a more intimate acquaintance with him. Hume's Essays, some of which I have likewise read lately, do not improve, in my view, on further knowledge.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: George Grote Print: Book
From the diary kept by George Grote for his fiancee, Harriet Lewin (1819):
'Read part of the first book of Aristotle's Politics, with a view to ascertain his notions on the original barrenness of money, and trade in general.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: George Grote Print: Book
From George Grote's diary, kept for his fiancee Harriet Lewin (1819):
'Mr Bury brought me Ricardo's pamphlets this day. Between 4 and 5 I set to and read his
Pamphlet on the depreciation of our paper currency. Dined at 1/2 past 5; played on the bass;
read some more Ricardo -- his reply to Mr. Bosanquet, which is most able [...] spent the
evening in going on with my "thoughts,' looking at some parts of Xenophon and Aristotle.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: George Grote Print: Book
George Grote to G. C. Lewis, 16 December 1840:
'I have been reading, and am still reading, B. de St. Hilaire, "De la Logique d'Aristote.' I have
been going through several parts of the Analyse which he gives, and comparing it with the
original [...] The more I read of Aristotle, the more I am impressed with profound admiration
of the reach of thought which his works display. He is, however, excessively difficult, and the
process of reading him is slow, almost to tediousness.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: George Grote Print: Book
'The annotations in Wilde's copy of J.E.T. Rodgers's edition of [Aristotle's] "Ethics", which is inscribed "Oscar Wilde, Magdalen College, October 1877", illustrate his passionate opposition to [the Historicist] view. Interleaved with the Greek text are around 200 pages on which Wilde has written copious notes in English and Greek. In them he creates a bridge between the past and the present by comparing Aristotle to modern writers such as David Hume and Tennyson...'
Century: 1850-1899 Reader/Listener/Group: Oscar Wilde Print: Book