[119] "Harne panne," brain case, cranium.
[120] Gethsemane.
[121] "Deere," hurt.
[122] Potts"s "Discovery." Webster"s "Displaying."
[123] A "Treatise of Witchcraft." By Alexander Roberts, B.D., and Preacher of G.o.d"s word at King"s Linne in Norfolk. 1616.
[124] Tract. Printed at London by G. Eld for I. Barnes, dwelling in the long Walke, neare Christ-Church. 1619.
[125] Wright and Hutchinson.
[126] Wright, quoting Lord Londesborough"s MSS.
[127] Wright.
[128] Webster. Wright. Harleian MSS.
[129] "A most Certain Strange and true Discovery of a witch, being taken by some Parliamentary Forces as she was standing on a small planck-board and sayling on it over the River of Newberry. 1643." Evidently a political matter, and perhaps with no substratum of truth in the story at all.
[130] A collection of Modern Relations. 1693.
[131] Matthew"s own account of them in a little tract called "Certaine Queries Answered, which have been and are likely to be objected against Matthew Hopkins, in his way of finding out witches," was slightly different.--1. Holt, like a white kitling.--2. Jarmara, a fat spaniel without any legs at all, which she said she kept fat, for he sucked good blood from her body.--3. Vinegar Tom, a long-legged greyhound with an head like an ox, a long tail and broad eyes, who, when Hopkins spoke to, and bade him go to the place provided for him and his angels, transformed himself into the shape of a child of foure years without a head, and gave half a dozen turns about the house and vanished at the door.--4.
Sack-and-sugar, like a black rabbit; and 5. Newes, like a polecat. Also he said that no mortal could invent such names as Elemauzer, Pyewacket, Peck in the Crown, Griezel Greedigut, &c., which, however, one of our great word-masters, Charles d.i.c.kens, would find no difficulty in doing, and which certainly have no very infernal sound in them.
[132] Baxter, Hutchinson, &c.
[133] Baxter.
[134] Tract.
[135] "The Laws against Witches." Published by Authority, 1645.
[136] "Collection of Modern Relations."
[137] "The Devil"s Delusion." 1649.
[138] Baxter.
[139] Baxter"s "Certainty of the World of Spirits."
[140] "A Prodigious and Tragicall History of the Arraignment, Tryall, Confession, and Condemnation of six Witches at Maidstone, in Kent, at the a.s.sizes held there in July, Fryday 30, this present year 1652. Before the Right Honourable Peter Warburton, one of the Justices of the Common Pleas.
Collected from the Observations of E. G. Gent, a learned Person, present at their Conviction and Condemnation, and digested by H. F. Gent." London: Printed for Richard Harper in Smithfield, 1652.
[141] A true Relation of one Mrs. Atkins, a Mercer"s Wife in Warwick, who was strangely carried away from her house in July last, and hath not since been heard of.
[142] Dr. George More"s "Antidote to Atheism." Dr. Lamb"s "Darling." By James Bower. 1653.
[143] Glanvil"s "Saducismus Triumphatus."
[144] Reginald Scot.
[145] "Collection of Modern Relations."
[146] Glanvil
[147] Glanvil.
[148] Glanvil.
[149] Tract; Published 1682.
[150] Baxter"s "World of Spirits."
[151] "Hartfordshire Wonder; or, Strange News from Ware." London. Printed for John Clark, at the Bible and Harp, in West-Smith-Field, near the Hospital Gate. 1669.
[152] Boulton"s "Compleat History of Magick."
[153] Baxter, Hutchinson.
[154] Dr. Hutchinson.
[155] That date seems wrong: ought it not to be 1699?
[156] Boulton"s "Compleat History of Magick." Dr. Hutchinson"s "Historical Essay."
[157] Surrey in Lancashire.
[158] A Tract of one leaf in a collection of trials.
[159] Various Tracts--and "Thomas Wright"s Narrative."
[160] Thomas Wright.