Berdmore wrote a book of literary criticism,
Specimens of Literary Resemblance in the works of Pope, Gray, and other celebrated writers; with critical observations: in a series of letters, London, 1801. It was addressed to the Rev. Peter Forster, rector of
Hedenham, Norfolk, a contemporary at Jesus College,.
Henry Meen, a contemporary, saw it as a vehicle for attacks on
Thomas Gray,
Richard Hurd,
William Warburton and others. In 1800, a year before the publication of the
Specimens of Literary Resemblance, Berdmore wrote under the pseudonym "O. P. C." an article for the
European Magazine, "Observations on the Two Pindaric Odes of Gray". In this fashion Berdmore involved himself in discussion of Gray's
Pindaric Odes in particular, siding with
Gilbert Wakefield, whom he had taught at Nottingham, against
Samuel Johnson's comments.
The Monthly Review took the book to be mounting an assault on Hurd's theory in
Discourse on Imitation (1751).
The Critical Review gave as an example of Berdmore's method the parallel found between a sermon by
Samuel Ogden and a passage in
Xenophon. Berdmore edited
Lusus Poetici ex ludo literario apud Ædes Carthusianas Londini. Quibus accessere orationes binæ in Suttoni laudem in Ædibus Carthusianis habitæ, 1791. ==Family==