Bramley became acquainted with
John Stainer after the composer was appointed organist at Magdalen College in 1860. Indeed it was Bramley, as a fellow of the college, who presented Stainer with his
doctoral robes. Bramley and
John Stainer published the first series of the
Christmas Carols, New and Old, with a total of 20
Christmas carols, sometime in the 1860s. Bramley acted as the textual editor, contributing a number of new Latin translations and original verses to the publication,
William Studwell and Dorothy Jones note that the book, with an informative preface, an index with information on the origin of the carol texts and illustrations by the
Brothers Dalziel caught the mood of the time, and was both "an artistic and commercial success". Studwell and Jones note that despite his numerous appointments,
Christmas Carols, New and Old was Bramley's only influential publication. His other published works (with the exception of a few publications related to
Oxford University administration) include a hymn, "The Great God of Heaven is Come Down to Earth", included in the
English Hymnal of 1906, and his new translation and expansion of the Latin carol "
The Cradle Song of the Blessed Virgin", with music by
Joseph Barnby. ==Personal life and death==