[1] About the ſame time, there was a certayne theefe, [...]ted [...] that v|ſed [...] kill [...] perſons a [...] to eate them. that with his familie, liued apart from the company of men, remayning ſecretely within a denne in Angus called Feniſden, who vſed to kill yong perſons, and to feede on their fleſh, for the whiche abhominable offence, being apprehended with his wife & all his familie, they were burnt to death, one of his daughters that was vnneth .12. monethes of age, only excepted, the which being preſerued and brought vp in Dundee, before ſhee came to the age of twelue yeeres, [...] daughter [...]eth to the [...] practiſe. ſhee was taken in the like crime for the whiche hir father dyed, wherevpon ſhee was iudged to be buried quicke: and going to execution, when the people in great multitude followed hir, in wondering at ſo hor|rible an offence committed by one of hir age and ſexe, ſhee turned to them that thus deteſted hir wicked doing,Hir words go|ing to execu|tion. and with a countenance repreſen|ting hir cruell inclination, ſayde to them: what neede you thus to rayle vpon me, as if I had done an heynous acte contrary to the nature of man? I tell you, that if you knew how pleaſant mans fleſhe is in taſt, there would none of you all for|beare to eate it. And thus with an impenitente and ſtubborne minde, ſhe ſuffered the appoynted execution.