W.
Wallace, [x]
Watching children, [136]
Water-boiling to learn who will be the future husband, [118]
Water-spirits, Homage to, [130]
Wechselbälge, or changelings, [60]
Weird, its true meaning, [43]
Westwood, [162]
Whirlwind, devil dancing with a witch, [128]
Wigan, dual action of the brain, [163]
Willow-knots, love-charms, [139]
Will, Waking, common sense or judgment, [163]
Winters, The, a gypsy clan, [206]
Witchcraft in England, [xiv];
origin of, Chapter I., [1], [6];
preceded Shamanism, [6]
Witchcraft in Italy, [155]
Witchcraft, Early, the first form or phase of superstition before a cultivated Shamanism, [124], [157]
Witch doctors, [192]
Witches, Burning, [239]
Witches’ foot-prints, [154];
their swimming-places, [155]
Witches only powers of nature, [156]
Witch, Etymology of the word: names for witches, [66];
signs of a witch, [67]
Witch Walnut-tree of Benevento, [149]
Wlislocki, Dr., Obligations to, [xi];
his works, [xiii], [23], [45], [47], [51], [52], [57], [67], [69], [71], [87], [91], [94], [111], [117], [120], [177], [235]
Wolos, Sting of, charms, [32], [34]
Woman, Old, who lived in a shoe, [117]
Women excel in certain qualities, [161]
Wordsworth, [166]
Wuch-ow-sen, the eagle, [240]
Wüthende Heer, or Wild Hunter, the storm, [59]
Wuttke, D., “Deutsche Volks aberglaube der Gegenwart,” [72]