Athenæ Oxonienses. The History of Oxford Writers. Vol. 1, p. 146
Henry Bull
, a Warwickshire Man born, became Demie of Magd. Coll. in 1535 or thereabouts, perpetual Fellow in 1540. being then Bach of Arts, and afterwards a zealous (*)(*) See Hist. & Antiq. Vniv. Oxon. lib. 1. p. 271. Man for reformation in K. Edw. days, an exile in the time of Qu. Marie, and a double, if not a treble, beneficed Man in the Reign of Qu. Eliz. He hath transmitted to posterity,
Christian prayers and holy meditations, as well for private as publick exercise, gathered out of the most godly learned of our time—Printed at Lond. several times; one edit. bears date 1584 another 92. a third in 1605. and all either in oct. or 16o.
Lydlies prayers, with certaine godly additions.—He also translated from Lat. into English A commentary upon the 15 Psalmes called Psalmi Graduum, that is Psalmes of degrees, from Psal. 120 to Psal. 133, faithfully copied out of the Lectures of Dr. Mart. Luther. Lond. 1577. qu. &c. Published with an Epistle before it by Joh. Fox the Martyrologist, at which time the translator had been dead about two or three years, for if I mistake not, he gave way to fate about Fifteen hundred seventy and five. 1575 One of both his names, who was a rich Physician of London, died there in June (or thereabouts) in 1577, but of what kin to the former, I know not.