Witch Stories
“Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.”—Exodus xxii. 18.
LONDON: PRINTED BY W. CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET.
In offering the following collection of witch stories to the public, I do not profess to have exhausted the subject, or to have made so complete a summary as I might have done, had I been admitted into certain private libraries, which contain, I believe, many concealed riches. But I had no means of introduction to them, and was obliged to be content with such authorities as I found in the British Museum, and the other public libraries to which I had access. I do not think that I have left much untold; but there must be, scattered about England, old MSS. and unique copies of records concerning which I can find only meagre allusions, or the mere names of the victims, without a distinctive fact to mark their special history. Should this book come to a second edition, any help from the possessors of these hitherto unpublished documents would be a gain to the public, and a privilege which I trust may be afforded me.
Neither have I attempted to enter into the philosophy of the subject. It is far too wide and deep to be discussed in a few hasty words; and to sift such evidence as is left us—to determine what was fraud, what self-deception, what actual disease, and what the exaggeration of the narrator—would have swelled my book into a far more important and bulky work than I intended or wished. As a general rule, I think we may apply all the four conditions to every case reported; in what proportion, each reader must judge for himself. Those who believe in direct and personal intercourse between the spirit-world and man, will probably accept every account with the unquestioning belief of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; those who have faith in the calm and uniform operations of nature, will hold chiefly to the doctrine of fraud; those who have seen much of disease and that strange condition called “mesmerism,” or “sensitiveness,” will allow the presence of absolute nervous derangement, mixed up with a vast amount of conscious deception, which the insane credulity and marvellous ignorance of the time rendered easy to practise; and those who have been accustomed to sift evidence and examine witnesses, will be utterly dissatisfied with the loose statements and wild distortion of every instance on record.
E. Lynn Linton
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WITCH STORIES
COLLECTED BY
E. LYNN LINTON,
AUTHOR OF “AZETH THE EGYPTIAN,” “AMYMONE,” ETC.
PREFACE.
BESSIE ROY.
THE TWO ALISONS.
BESSIE SMITH.
THE MIDWIFE’S DOUBLE SIN.
SIXTEEN HUNDRED AND FORTY-THREE.
JONET WATSON AND THE DEVIL IN GREEN.
MISCELLANEOUS.
THE ISLAND WITCHES.
MISCELLANEOUS.
THE YOUNG HONOURABLE’S DECEITS.
THE LAST OF THE WITCHES.
THE WITCH OF BERKELEY.
EARLY HISTORIC TRIALS.
THE AFFLICTIONS OF ALEXANDER NYNDGE,
MISCELLANEOUS.
THE WITCHES OF S. OSEES,
THE WOMAN AND THE BEAR.
SWEET FATHER FOREMAN.
MR. FAIRFAX’S FOLLY.
THE WITCH-FINDING OF HOPKINS.
THE MANNINGTREE WITCHES,
THE HUNTINGDON IMPS.
MR. CLARK’S EXAMPLES.
THE NEWCASTLE PRICKERS.
THE TEWKESBURY WITCH THAT SUCKED THE SOW.
THE WITCH OF WAPPING.
THE WITCHES OF THE RESTORATION.
THE WITCH-FINDER FOUND
THE ASTRAL SPIRIT’S ASSAULT.
THE YOUGHAL WITCH.
OUR LATEST.
THE END.