• ''An Abridgment of John Foxe's "Booke of Acts and Monumentes of the Church"'', London, 1581, 1589, 4to; dedicated to Sir Francis Walsingham. •
Hygieina, id est De Sanitate tuenda, Medicinæ pars prima, London, 1581, 8vo; dedicated to
Lord Burghley. •
Therapeutica; hoc est de Sanitate restituenda, Medicinæ pars altera; also with the title
Medicinæ Therapeuticæ pars: De Dyscrasia Corporis Humani, London, 1583, 8vo; dedicated to Lord Burghley. Both parts reprinted at Frankfort, 1688–9, and at Mayence 1647. •
In Physicam Gvlielmi Adolphi Scribonii, post secundam editionem ab autore denuò copiosissimè adauctam, & in iii. Libros distinctam, Animaduersiones, Cambridge, 1584, 8vo; Frankfort, 1593, 8vo; dedication to Sir Philip Sidney, dated from Ipswich. •
A Treatise of Melancholie, Containing the cavses thereof, & reasons of the strange effects it worketh in our minds and bodies: with the phisicke cure, and spirituall consolation for such as haue thereto adioyned an afflicted conscience, London (Thomas Vautrollier), 1586, 8vo; another edition, printed the same year by John Windet. This is said to be the work which suggested Burton's
Anatomy of Melancholy. •
Characterie. An Arte of shorte, swifte, and secrete writing by character. Inuented by Timothe Bright, Doctor of Phisicke. Imprinted at London by I. Windet, the Assigne of Tim. Bright, 1588. Cum priuilegio Regiæ maiestatis. Forbidding all others to print the same, 24mo. •
Animadversiones de Traduce, in Goclenius's Ψυχολογία, Marpurg, 1590, 1594, 1597. His first medical work (dated 1584) is in two parts: 'Hygieina, on preserving health', and 'Therapeutica, on restoring health.' In the part on poisons, where the flesh of the chameleon, that of the newt, and that of the crocodile are treated as three several varieties of poison, each requiring a peculiar remedy. Bright's preface implies that he lectured at Cambridge; he dedicates both parts to
William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, as chancellor of the university, and speaks as if he knew him and his family, and he praises the learning of
Mildred Cooke, Lady Burghley. His
Treatise of Melancholie is as much metaphysical as medical. There is a chapter in which he discusses the question 'how the soule by one simple faculty performeth so many and diverse actions,' and illustrates his argument by a description of the way in which the complicated movements of a watch proceed from 'one right and straight motion'. ==References==