A charme or experiment to find out a witch. [pag. 266].

¶ To spoile a theefe, a witch, or any other enimie, and to be delivered from the evill. [pag. 269]. A notable charme or medicine to pull out an arrowhead, or any such thing that sticketh in the flesh or bones, and cannot otherwise be had out. Charmes against a quotidian ague. For all maner of agues intermittant. Periapts, characters, &c: for agues, and to cure all diseases, and to deliver from all evill. [p. 270]. More charmes for agues. [pag. 271]. For a bloudie fluxe, or rather an issue of bloud. Cures commensed and finished by witchcraft, [pa. 273]. Another witchcraft or knaverie, practised by the same surgion. [pag. 275]. Another experiment for one bewitched. Otherwise. A knacke to know whether you be bewitched, or no, &c. [pag. 276].

That one witchcraft may lawfullie meete with another. [pag. 277].

Who are privileged from witches, what bodies are aptest to be bewitched, or to be witches, why women are rather witches than men, and what they are. [pag. 277].

What miracles witchmongers report to have been done by witches words &c: contradictions of witchmongers among themselves, how beasts are cured hereby, of bewitched butter, a charme against witches, & a counter charme, the effect of charmes and words prooved by L. Vairus to be woonderfull. [pag. 279].

¶ A charme to find hir that bewitched your kine. Another, for all that have bewitched any kind of cattell. [p. 281]. A speciall charme to preserve all cattell from witchcraft. [pag. 282].

Lawfull charmes, rather medicinable cures for diseased cattell. The charme of charmes, and the power thereof. [pag. 283].

¶ The charme of charmes. Otherwise. [pag. 284].

A confutation of the force and vertue falselie ascribed to charmes and amulets, by the authorities of ancient writers, both divines and physicians. [pag. 285].

The xiii. Booke.