In the latter part of 1624 James was employed with
John Selden in the examination of the
Arundel marbles, and when Selden published his
Marmora Arundeliana in 1628 he acknowledged in his preface the assistance he had received from James. James had already been introduced to
Sir Robert Bruce Cotton; he soon became Cotton's librarian, and the lists of contents prefixed to many manuscripts in the
Cottonian collection are in James's handwriting. On 22 October 1629 James was presented to the sinecure living of
Little Mongeham,
Kent, the only church preferment which he ever held. After Sir Robert Cotton's death in 1631 James remained in the service of his son, Sir Thomas, at whose house in Westminster he died early in December 1638 of a
quartan fever. He was buried in
St. Margaret's Church, Westminster, on 8 December; the register describes him as "Mr. Richard James, that most famous antiquary". James was unmarried. Some of his early poems are addressed to a lady, whom he styles Albina, afterwards the wife of Mr. Philip Wodehouse. He had a wide circle of scholarly friends. They included
Sir Kenelm Digby,
Sir John Eliot (with whom he corresponded during his imprisonment, and whom he helped in preparing his treatises
De Jure Majestatis and
Monarchy of Man),
Sir Henry Spelman,
Ben Jonson (to whom he addressed a poem on his
Staple of Niews first presented),
Sebastian Benefield,
Thomas Jackson,
Brian Twine, and
Thomas Greaves. ==Works==