During his stay in St. Petersburg Palmer edited R. W. Blackmore's translation of
Andrei Nikolaevich Muraviev's
History of the Church in Russia, Oxford, 1842. Too late to defend
Tract XC, he rebutted a charge of "Romanism" levelled at himself (in his
Letter to
Charles Pourtales Golightly, and his
Letter to a Protestant-Catholic, both published at Oxford in 1841; and his
Letter to
Renn Dickson Hampden, Oxford, 1842). His
Protest against Prusso-Anglican Protestantism, which he lodged with Archbishop Howley in reference to the recently established
Anglican-Prussian Bishopric in Jerusalem, was, at the archbishop's request, withheld from publication. He issued, however, its notes and appendices as
Aids to Reflection on the seemingly Double Character of the Established Church, Oxford, 1841, and treated the same topic in an anonymous work. On his second return to England Palmer occupied himself with his
Harmony of Anglican Doctrine with the Doctrine of the Eastern Church (Aberdeen, 1846; Greek translation, Athens, 1851) and in the preparation of his case for the Scottish Episcopal College.
An Appeal to the Scottish Bishops and Clergy, and generally to the Church of their Communion, Edinburgh, 1849, was dismissed unheard by the
Scottish Episcopal Synod assembled in Edinburgh on 7 September 1849. In 1853 appeared his 'Dissertations on Subjects relating to the Orthodox or Eastern-Catholic Communion,' London. In later life, and in poor health, Palmer made antiquarian researches in ecclesiastical history. He left voluminous manuscripts, mainly autobiographical.
John Henry Newman, to whom he used to pay an annual visit at
Birmingham, edited after his death his
Notes of a Visit to the Russian Church in the Years 1840, 1841, London, 1882. Palmer was author also of: • ‘Short Poems and Hymns, the latter mostly Translations,’ Oxford, 1843. • Ταπεινὴ ἀναφορὰ τοῖς πατριάρχαις, Athens, 1850. • Διατριβαὶ περὶ τῆς Ἀγγλικῆς Ἐκκλησίas, Athens, 1851. • Διατριβαὶ περὶ τῆς άνατολικῆς ἐκκλησίas, Athens, 1852. • ‘Remarks on the Turkish Question,’ London, 1858. • ‘An Introduction to Early Christian Symbolism; being the Description of a Series of Fourteen Compositions from Fresco-paintings, Glasses, and Sculptured Sarcophagi; with three Appendices,’ London, 1859; new edition, under the title ‘Early Christian Symbolism: a Series of Compositions,’ &c., ed.
James Spencer Northcote and W. R. Brownlow, London, 1885. • 'Egyptian Chronicles: with a Harmony of Sacred and Egyptian Chronology, and an Appendix on Babylonian and Assyrian Antiquities,’ London, 1861, 2 vols. • ‘Commentatio in Librum Danielis,’ Rome, 1874. • ‘The Patriarch Nicon and the Tsar,’ from the Russian, London, 6 vols. 1871–6. ==References==