The Chapters of Book IV
1. How it is not easy for the writer to write of all the martyr’s great deeds
2. Concerning Eilward, to whom the martyr Thomas restored gouged-out eyes and cut-off genitals [see Parallel Miracles no. 2]
3. Concerning Ralph of Longueville, perfectly cured of leprosy and struck by the contagion of leprosy again
4. Concerning Humphrey of Chesterton, released from a similar ailment
5. Concerning Odo of Falaise, who, having been struck in the eye, lacked sight for seven years
6. Concerning the house of Gilbert, baker of the bishop of Rochester, which was freed from fire in the midst of flames
7. Concerning the houses of William of Yarmouth similarly freed
8. Concerning William of Parndon, son of Eudes, who was dying or dead
9. Concerning Baldwin, from the same place, who had weakened from an acute illness
10. Concerning a nun who remained half dry in the midst of a heavy rain
11. Concerning the saint’s water turning into blood
12. Item concerning the same
13. Concerning Seileva of Froyle, from whose breast a swelling of extraordinary size protruded
14. Concerning Everard of Winchester, weakened by a sudden paralysis
15. Concerning his brother [Ranulph] the priest
16. Concerning the wife of [Anfrid] of Ferring, in whose uterus a fetus had putrefied
17. Concerning Alelm who, having cut his thumb, invoked the martyr, and after the meal did not find a scar of the wound
18. Concerning Weremund, son of Wielard of Béthune, whose bowels spilled out of his anus
19. Concerning Hermer, son of Tetion, who had movements and tremours in all his limbs
20. Concerning [Vidoch] de Anoch, whose water boiled out of its vessel on account of his anger, but when he became pacified, the water was pacified too
21. Concerning Mary, who wept at one moment and laughed the next
22. Concerning Durand, the son of Osbern of Eu, into whose ear a stone had fallen
23. Concerning Ernald, Ernulf, and Amalric, three ill men from the border region of Thérouanne and Ponthieu
24. Concerning Philip of Alnwick, whose genitals had swollen up
25. Concerning his son John, whose entire body was possessed by pustules
26. Concerning a certain epileptic woman in the aforesaid Philip’s household
27. Concerning the leprous Walter
28. Concerning the leprous Eilgar
29. Concerning Ernold, the dropsical baker of the earl Simon
30. Concerning Juliana, the daughter of Gerard of Rochester, who was not able to open her eyelids
31. Concerning the girl named Laeticia, who lost an eye from the piercing of a straw when she was in her cradle
32. Concerning the knight Geoffrey, surnamed Malaeartes, who was blinded by the water of the saint
33. Concerning Aliza, the wife of the fisherman Martin of Leicester, who was blinded by the martyr
34. Concerning a peasant of Abingdon, who was curbed by the martyr with a similar blow
35. Concerning the son of William de Benewella, to whom a similar misfortune occurred
36. Concerning [Segiva] who had borne an ear of rye in her esophagus for nearly three years
37. Concerning Matilda of Cologne, a demoniac
38. Concerning a penny the saint restored to a certain matron named Sibilla
39. Concerning Richard, the cleric of the sheriff of Devon, to whom the martyr administered halfpennies according to his intent
40. Concerning Ralph, the subprior of the church of St. Augustine, apostle of the English, whose pennies the martyr multiplied
41. Concerning Henry, a youth of London, who transferred his goods to another ship when he was sailing from Norway as a result of the martyr’s admonition, and who was saved from the peril of death
42. Concerning the ship that followed the sailors who had abandoned it without any navigator [see Parallel Miracles no. 3]
43. Concerning another ship that the saint visibly freed [see Parallel Miracles no. 4]
44. Concerning [Ailred], a young man from Exeter, who was benevolently freed by the virtue of the martyr when he was entwined in an anchor’s rope and carried headlong
45. Concerning a man of Dover, who recovered three lost anchors through the saint [see Parallel Miracles no. 5]
46. Concerning other men freed from a storm on the sea by the martyr
47. Concerning a certain ill man who asked for the saint’s water, drank water deceptively brought to him from a well, and was healed
48. Concerning Warin, surnamed Grosso, whose swollen arm the saint beautifully healed in a dream
49. Concerning a certain canon of Croxton, whose expelled eye was put back into its place by the water, without the touch of any hand
50. Concerning another, a certain swollen man in the same abbey
51. Concerning a certain canon of Bedford, on whose neck burning blisters emerged, which suddenly vanished by means of the martyr’s water
52. Concerning Ingelram son of [Stephen] of Goulton, whose arm the saint struck with an affliction and afterwards cured in a dream [see Parallel Miracles no. 6]
53. Concerning the swollen Mabel de Aglandre, who was judged incurable by doctors
54. Concerning the dropsical Eliza of Middleton of Oxfordshire
55. Concerning a dropsical woman of Merston
56. Concerning a blind boy and an insane [girl] from Wales
57. Concerning the insane Walter of Grimsby
58. Concerning dogs silenced with the name of the martyr
59. Concerning Eda of Scotland, who could not walk, and who rose and walked by means of a monk commanding her in the name of the saint
60. Concerning [Hugo] de Tukin, exhausted by a fistula
61. Concerning [Melania] of Fontenay, who had a similar fistula
62. Concerning a boy of Rochester who fell in the water
63. Concerning a boy of Sarre who was submerged in a bath
64. Concerning the dead son of Jordan son of Eisulf [see Parallel Miracles no. 7]
65. Concerning the daughter of Jordan of Plumstock, who was thought to be dead [see Parallel Miracles no. 8]
66. Concerning the drowned son of Hugh de Benedega [see Parallel Miracles no. 9]
67. Concerning the wife of Peter de Arches, who had a flux of blood
68. Concerning Gerard of Flanders, who had kidney stones
69. Concerning the smith Geoffrey, who worked at an inappropriate time and whose fingers adhered to his palm
70. Concerning the dropsical William of St. David’s
71. Concerning Juliana of Godmersham, whose arm was mortified
72. Concerning Elias, monk of the church of Reading, who was struck, it was thought, with leprosy [see Parallel Miracles no. 10]
73. Concerning the leprous Gerard
74. Concerning the leprous Gilbert of St. Valery
75. Concerning the leprous Peter of Abingdon [see Parallel Miracles no. 11]
76. Concerning the leprous Richard
77. Concerning two men, of whom one miraculously triumphed in a duel over the other
78. Concerning others who were accused concerning the game of the lord king that they had taken
79. Concerning others accused of the same thing
80. Concerning Agnes, whose stepson took her dower and returned it to her in a sudden change of mind
81. Concerning Peter de Denintona, who was suddenly cured of an enormous swelling
82. Concerning Alexander, partially deaf
83. Concerning Robert, also partially deaf
84. Concerning Osbern of Lisieux, who had a hernia
85. Concerning a certain John who was blinded and afterwards could miraculously see again by means of the water of the martyr
86. Concerning a monk of the church of Reading, who was freed from a devil that had closed up his throat and nose by means of the martyr’s water [see Parallel Miracles no. 12]
87. Concerning a monk of Mont-Dieu, Geoffrey, suffering from dropsy, who deflated when he stroked an account of the martyr’s miracles over his body and was healed
88. Concerning a boy of Winchester on whom a wall fell [see Parallel Miracles no. 13]
89. Concerning the ale that did not purify itself as ale usually does, and suddenly received the necessary condition with the application of a string that had held an ampulla holding the saint’s water
90. Concerning Elias de Sibburnia, whose viscera were so constricted they seemed to be attached to his back
91. Concerning a certain Hadewisa, who had an interior rupture
92. Concerning Robert de Beveruno with the stone
93. Concerning his neighbor Hingan, who suffered sudden fits
94. Concerning the son of the earl of Clare, resurrected from the dead [see Parallel Miracles no. 14]