A letter to the duke of Newcastle about liberty and necessity, printed 1676, and 1677. [I have this somewhere among my bookes, printed about 30 yeares since. It was edited first by John Davys of Kidwelly; and there is a preface to it with S. W., i.e. Seth Ward, who then had a high esteeme of him.]
De Mirabilibus Pecci[1517]—English and Latin, 1678—a New-year's guift to his lord, who gave him 5 li., about 1627.
Decameron Physiologicum, or ten dialogues of naturall philosophy, to which is added the proportion of straight line to halfe the arc of quadrant, English, 1678[1518].
Considerations upon the reputation, loyalty, manners, and religion of Thomas Hobbes, written by himselfe, printed 1680, with part of severall of his letters to W. Crooke.—[This[1519] was first printed by Andrew Crooke 1662, ἀνονυμῶς.]
Vita Thomae Hobbes, 4to, printed 1680; in Latin verse; quarto.
Idem, in English, translated by ...; 1680, folio.
An historicall narration concerning heresie and the punishment thereof, English, 1680.
[Where[1520] is the book against Dr. Wallis in 4to that came out in Jan. 1679/80?].
[1521]He haz omitted here Aristotel's Rhetorique, printed long since by Andrew Crooke, but without his name; but Dr. Blackburne, W. Crooke, and I will lay our heads together and sett these things right.