[837] Glanvil, pt. ii, pp. 136, 137, 152.
[838] Sharpe, p. 191.
[839] Forbes, ii, pp. 33.
[840] F. Hutchinson, Hist. Essay, p. 77.
[841] Giffard, p. 18.
[842] Witches at Chelmsford, pp. 24-32; Philobiblon Soc., viii.
[843] Rehearsall, par. 2-5.
[844] Also called Tissey. Compare the name of the magic cat given to Frances More by Goodwife Weed, p. 219.
[845] In Ales Hunt's own confession (q. v.) the animals in question are called colts. I would suggest that this is cotes, the well-known provincialism for cats; but the recorder understood the word as colts and further improved it into horses.
[846] Witches taken at St. Oses, A 3, A 5, C 3 and 4, B 2, B 5 and C 1, B 3.