Two experiments were carried out to assess nonlinguistic memory in aphasia. In the first experiment, subjects had to make judgments about the frequency with which words in a study list were repeated, and, in the second, they had to recall the spatial location in which a pictured object had been presented originally. Aphasics were very accurate in both tasks and did not differ from normal controls. It is suggested that a comprehensive account of memory in aphasia requires that we look beyond their omnipresent language deficit to more general processing factors such as attentional capacity.