The Chapters of Book II
1. Concerning the mute Samson
2. Concerning Geldewin, the son of Godefrid the baker, whose recovery seemed hopeless
3. Concerning two other sons of the same man, who were beset by fevers
4. Concerning the blind Manwin
5. Concerning the lame Emelina
6. When and for what reason the doors of the crypt, in which the body of the martyr reposed, were opened
7. Concerning Edilda of Canterbury, who had not been able to walk on the sole of her foot for more than a year
8. Concerning Wlviva, who walked with the support of a staff
9. Concerning Edmund, who could see nothing with one of his eyes
10. Concerning Muriel, who vomited cherry pits, plum pits, and acorns
11. Concerning Ethelburga, who lost the use of her arm from an acute gout
12. Concerning the blind Robert, blacksmith of the Isle of Thanet
13. Concerning the insane Henry of Fordwich
14. Concerning a deaf woman
15. Concerning Eilward of Tenham, who was not able to smell anything
16. Concerning a crippled boy to whom the saint denied healing
17. Concerning another boy, blind, who was similarly denied
18. Concerning Agnes, from whose putrefying face a worm came out
19. Concerning the pyxes of Ralph of Sheppey which split open when contacted by the blood and water
20. Concerning the pyx of Godeliva, which, full of the water, split open when she entered the house of a certain Jew
21. Concerning the pyx of another woman, from which the water vanished
22. Concerning the pyxes of Peter and Haimo, from which the water was subtracted in a similar way
23. Concerning the paralyzed William of Dene
24. Concerning Saxeva of Dover, who suffered from stomach spasms and pain of the arm
25. Concerning Richard of [Northampton], suffering from lientery
26. Concerning the private translation of the martyr and a vision of the martyr seen the same night
27. Concerning the miraculously crippled Richard of Bearsted, who was cured miraculously on the day after that translation
28. Concerning the crippled Ralph de Tangis
29. Concerning the replacement of the martyr in the prior location, and of the edifice of the tomb
30. Concerning a certain Matilda of Canterbury, who was not able to put her head into the window of the tomb
31. Concerning a certain insane Elward who thrust his whole body through one of the windows and exited through the other, which afterwards, when he was healed, he was not able to do
32. Concerning William of London, who, having inserted and pulled out his head, immediately recovered the sight of an eye
33. Concerning Ansfrid of Dover, deprived of nearly all his senses
34. Concerning Wekerilda, crippled and blind in one eye
35. Concerning the blind Elvida of Beckenham
36. Concerning Emma, who had a terrible ulcer on her [shin] and foot
37. Concerning the blind Matilda of Ipswich
38. Concerning Brian de Insula, whose chin was stuck to his chest
39. Concerning Frodo, who had disabled feet
40. Concerning the son of Eilmer de Cleche, who had never had the ability to walk, stand upright, or get to his feet
41. Concerning the son of a certain William of Lincoln, who was unable to walk on his feet because of a swelling on his kidneys
42. Concerning the ill Eremburga of London, a hopeless case
43. How the persecutors of the martyr maligned the monks of the church of Canterbury in order to cloud the glory of the miracles
44. Concerning Thomas of Etton, who was struck with quinsy when he maligned the martyr [see Parallel Miracles no. 1]
45. Concerning Juliana, the wife of Robert Puintel, who was distended by an enormous swelling
46. Concerning a certain [Ralph] of Lincoln, who was not able to stem a nosebleed
47. Concerning the son of Matilda, who lay as if insensible until a vow was made for him to the martyr, when he immediately turned to his mother’s breasts
48. Concerning Gilbert, a shoemaker of London, who was cured of fistula
49. Concerning Hugh of Bourne, also freed from an agonizing fistula
50. Concerning a pyx in which the martyr’s water disappeared, proving the carrier to be a thief
51. Concerning Robert, canon of the church of St. Frideswide of Oxford, who was weakened by severe diarrhea
52. Concerning Master Robert, the prior of the same church, whose leg, afflicted by a grave and chronic disease, the martyr cured
53. Concerning William, a knight of Earley, freed from a similar affliction
54. Concerning the son of the same knight, seized by madness
55. Concerning Master Peter de Melida, released from high fevers, and certain others who were cured
56. Concerning Roger, a clerk of London, who, when he was feverish, slept in a place where the saint had lain and woke well. Collecting the dust of that same place, he administered it as a drink to many others for their health
57. Concerning Guncelin, a monk of Norwich, who was healed of a swollen and painful arm by means of the martyr’s stole
58. Concerning Ansfreda of Canterbury, whose quinsy of the neck the mantle of the martyr repressed
59. Concerning Solomon, nearly one hundred years old, whose blindness the martyr illuminated
60. Concerning Henry, son of William of Kelvedon, who tasted the martyr’s water and vomited a worm half a cubit long
61. Concerning Nicholas, son of Hugh de Beauchamp, whom the martyr healed of dropsy
62. Concerning Richard, knight de Rokeleia, healed of a dangerous headache
63. Concerning Adam de Hadlega, gravely ill from the extremes of the same disease
64. Concerning John of the Chapel, who, after he tasted the saint’s water, sneezed and ejected a cherry stone that he had borne for nearly four years
65. Concerning [Robert] of Springfield, who obtained the health of his soul after drinking the health-giving water, as he had requested
66. Concerning Roger, son of Herbert of Bisley, to whom something similar happened
67. Concerning the son of this Roger, the clerk Thomas, who was cured of three infirmities
68. Concerning the pilgrims in peril on the sea who escaped to dry land by invoking the martyr, though other ships in their company sank
69. Concerning others who suffered on the sea with the breeze of winds withdrawn
70. Concerning the knight William of Chester, whose arm was [folded up]
71. Concerning Ralph of Essex, oppressed by a similar trouble
72. Concerning Ada of London, who was not able to turn herself onto her side nor move from her bed
73. Concerning Thomas, son of Adam, who had the stone
74. Concerning Lefseda, whose right eye was blind
75. Concerning Godiva of Chelmsford, blind for five years
76. Concerning Geoffrey of Chalgrave, blind from birth
77. Concerning the daughter of [Gilbert] of the Isle of Thanet who had contracted feet