How long he remained a prisoner is not clear, but in all probability until after the execution of the Regent Morton in 1581. In that year he printed the following books-Patrick Adamson's Catechismus latino Carmine Redditus et in libros quatuor digestus, a small octavo of forty leaves, printed in Roman type; Fowler's Answer to John Hamilton, a quarto of twenty-eight leaves; and a Declaration without place or printer's name, but attributed to his press: after this nothing more is heard of him.
"A Short History of English Printing, 1476-1898"
Henry R. Plomer
Cardinal latino's Constitution was abandoned, and a new form of government adopted.
"Dante: His Times and His Work"
Arthur John Butler
In science, discovery, and invention the Negroes claim Lislet Geoffroy of the French Academy, latino and Amo, well known in European university circles; and in America the explorers Dorantes and Henson; Banneker, the almanac maker; Wood, the telephone improver; McCoy, inventor of modern lubrication; Matseliger, who revolutionized shoemaking.
"The Negro"
W.E.B. Du Bois