Lee was reputed learned, was nicknamed "Rabbi Lee", but only published anonymously. His works included: •
Horologium Christianum, Oxford, 1689. • ''The Labouring Person's Remembrancer, or a Practical Discourse of the Labour of the Body'', Oxford, 1690. • The Preface to
A Letter to some Divines, London, 1695, translated from the High Dutch of Dr. Peterson. •
The History of Montanism, London, 1709, as part ii. of
The Spirit of Enthusiasm exorcised by
George Hickes. This work was taken as a recantation of his devotion to Jane Leade. • ''The Christian's Exercise
(Thomas à Kempis), London, 1715, 1716, 1717, sometimes attributed to Nelson, who wrote the Address'' prefixed. •
Considerations concerning Oaths London, 1716, n.p., 1722, n.p. n.d. •
Memoirs of the Life of Mr. John Kettlewell; compiled from the collections of Hickes and Nelson, London, 1718. •
The Unity of the Church and Expediency of Forms of Prayer, London, 1719. •
An Epistolary Discourse, concerning the Books of Ezra. . . . Together with a New Version of the Fifth Book of Esdras, London, 1722; begun in 1709 to precede a separate publication of
Simon Ockley's translation of
Esdras from the Arabic, and posthumously published by Dr. Thomas Haywood from Lee's manuscripts.
William Whiston's exposition of the fifth vision of Esdras was intended as a supplement to Lee's manuscript 'Exposition of the VII. Visions.' • A collection of some of Lee's works called
Απολειπόμενα, or Dissertations, Theological, Mathematical, and Physical, London, 1752. Lee edited the second volume of
John Ernest Grabe's
Septuagint from the author's manuscripts, Oxford, 1719, and wrote the prolegomena to the historical portion of the work, the manuscript of which is preserved in the
Bodleian Library. He supplied annotations to the
Book of Genesis in
Samuel Parker's
Bibliotheca Biblica, 1720. He is said to have helped Nelson in his
Festivals and Fasts, and, from manuscripts given to him by the author, published Nelson's
Address to Persons of Quality and Estate, London, 1715. Nelson's papers at his death went to Lee, but he did not live to write Nelson's life. A paraphrase or enlargement of
Jakob Boehme's
Treatise on the Supernatural Life, by Lee (incorrectly attributed to
William Law in a footnote), was inserted in some copies of the fourth volume of Boehme's
Works published in 1781 (pp. 73–104). Mystical poems inserted in Jane Leade's works, ascribed to Lee by
Christopher Walton, may have been the work of Richard Roach. An account of Jane Leade's last days, by Lee, was published in a German translation in Amsterdam, but does not appear to be extant. A manuscript retranslation into English was in the Walton Library (then in
Dr. Williams's Library), with letters by Lee on the occasion of Leade's death. ==Notes==