canto 7. stanza 6. and note.
[482:A] Discoverie of Witchcraft, book i. chap. 4. pp. 9-11.
[482:B] James's Works, by Winton, p. 116.
[483:A] James's Works, by Winton, p. 117.
[485:A] Discoverie of Witchcraft, book iii. chap. 1, 2. pp. 40-42.
[485:B] Works apud Winton, pp. 112, 113.
[486:A] King James's Works apud Winton, pp. 111. 135, 136.
[486:B] Among these we find the mighty name of Bacon; this great man attributing, in the Tenth Century of his Natural History, the achievements and the confessions of witches and wizards to the effects of a morbid imagination.
[487:A] To the traditions of Boethius and Holinshed, we may add a modern authority in the person of Sir John Sinclair, who tells us that "In Macbeth's time, Witchcraft was very prevalent in Scotland, and two of the most famous witches in the kingdom lived on each hand of Macbeth, one at Collace, the other not far from Dunsinnan House, at a place called the Cape. Macbeth applied to them for advice, and by their counsel built a lofty Castle upon the top of an adjoining hill, since called Dunsinnan. The moor where the Witches met, which is in the parish of St. Martin's, is yet pointed out by the country-people, and there is a stone still preserved which is called _the Witches Stone_."—Statistical Account of Scotland, vol. xx. p. 242.