The Chapters of Book I
1. A first and a second vision
2. A third vision
3. A fourth vision
4. A fifth vision
5. A sixth vision
6. A seventh vision
7. What happened after the visions, or which miracles are to be recorded
8. Concerning Emma, wife of Robert de Sancto Andrea in Sussex, who invoked the martyr on the third day after the martyrdom and recovered from the illness that had held her
9. Concerning Huelina, the daughter of Aaliza of London, who was healed at Gloucester five days after the martyrdom, with a sudden disappearance of a swelling of the head that she was accustomed to suffer every month
10. Concerning William Belet, whose swollen arm lost its swelling on the sixth day after his passion
11. Concerning Brithiva, a blind woman of Canterbury
12. Concerning William, a priest of London, from whom a paralysis of the tongue was removed
13. Concerning Stephen, a knight of Holland, freed from a demon’s infestation
14. Concerning William Patrick, freed from a toothache
15. Concerning Robert, who had a hepatic complaint
16. Concerning Alditha of Worth, freed from the anguish of childbirth
17. Item concerning the multiplication of the holy blood
18. Item concerning the multiplication of the blood
19. Item concerning the same
20. Concerning the boxwood pyx that suddenly split when contacted by the blood, and how that blood vanished
21. Concerning the daughter of Ralph of Bourne, who was healed by the martyr’s cloak
22. Concerning Etheldreda, freed from a quartan fever
23. Concerning the boy William of Canterbury, freed from a terrible swelling by drinking the blood of the saint and water
24. Concerning Goditha, of a certain Matthew of Canterbury, who, brought to the martyr’s tomb by two women, left on her own feet