Author:John Bramhall

Works

 * The Serpent Salve, or, a Remedie for the Biting of an Aspe Wherein the Observators Grounds are Discussed and Plainly Discovered to Be Unsound, Seditious, Not Warranted by the Laws of God, of Nature, or of Nations, and Most Repugnant to the Known Laws and Customs of This Realm: For the Reducing of Such of His Majesties Well-Meaning Subjects into the Right Way who have been Mis-Led by that Ignis Fatuus. (1643)
 * A faire warning, to take heed of the Scotish discipline, as being of all others most injurious to the civill magistrate, most oppressive to the subject, most pernicious to both (1649)
 * A Defence of True Liberty from Ante-Cedent and Extrinsecall Necessity Being an Answer to a Late Book of Mr. Thomas Hobbs of Malmsbury, Intituled, a Treatise of Liberty and Necessity (1655)
 * A just vindication of the Church of England, from the unjust aspersion of criminal schisme: wherein the nature of criminal schisme, the divers sorts of schismaticks, the liberties and priviledges of national churches, the rights of sovereign magistrates, the tyranny, extortion and schisme of the Roman Communion of old, and at this very day, are manifested to the view of the world (1654)
 * A Replication To The Bishop of Chalcedon His Survey of the Vindication Of The Chvrch of England, From Criminous Schism: Clearing the English Laws from the aspersion of Cruelty. With an Appendix in answer to the exceptions of S.W. (1656)
 * Castigations of Mr. Hobbes his last animadversions in the case concerning liberty and universal necessity: wherein all his exceptions about that controversie are fully satisfied (1658) (with an afterpiece called "The Catching of Leviathan, the Great Whale")
 * Bishop Bramhall's vindication of himself and the episcopal clergy, from the Presbyterian charge of popery, as it is managed by Mr. Baxter in his treatise of the Grotian religion together with a preface shewing what grounds there are of fears and jealousies of popery (1672)