His
Atheomastix; clearing foure truthes, against atheists and infidels was published posthumously in 1622, a work written against
atheism. According to the
Cambridge History of English and American Literature, (1907–21), Volume VII, Fotherby "relied chiefly on
St. Thomas Aquinas in his demonstration of the being of God, and maintained that there is a "natural prenotion" that there is a God." This work was the source of many of the poetic quotations occurring in
The Generall Historie of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Isles (1624), by
John Smith of Jamestown. ==Notes==