- Title Page, Preface - 6k
- The Introduction - 4k
- Ch. 1: Of the law eternal - 6k
- Ch. 2: Of the law of reason, or the law of nature of reasonable creatures - 7k
- Ch. 3: Of the law of God - 7k
- Ch. 4: Of the law of man - 7k
- Ch. 5: Of the 1st ground of the law of England - 8k
- Ch. 6: Of the 2nd ground of the law of England - 7k
- Ch. 7: Of the 3rd ground of the law of England - 15k
- Ch. 8: Of the 4th ground of the law of England - 11k
- Ch. 9: Divers cases wherein the student doubteth whether they be only maxims of the law, or that they be grounded upon the law of reason - 7k
- Ch. 10: Of the 5th ground of the law of England - 4k
- Ch. 11: Of the 6th ground of the law of England - 4k
- Ch. 12: The 1st question of the doctor, of the law of England and conscience - 6k
- Ch. 13: What sinderesis is - 5k
- Ch. 14: Of reason - 5k
- Ch. 15: Of conscience - 8k
- Ch. 16: What is equity - 8k
- Ch. 17: In what manner a man shall be holpen by equity in the laws of England - 8k
- Ch. 18: Whether the statute rehearsed by the doctor be against conscience, or not - 6k
- Ch. 19: Of what law this question is to be understood; that is to say, where conscience shall be ruled after the law - 11k
- Ch. 20: Divers cases where conscience is to be ordered after the law - 9k
- Ch. 21: The 1st question of the student whether conscience is ordered after the law - 6k
- Ch. 22: The 2nd question of the student whether conscience is ordered after the law - 5k
- Ch. 23: The 3rd question of the student whether conscience is ordered after the law - 4k
- Ch. 24: The 4th question of the student whether conscience is ordered after the law - 6k
- Ch. 25: The 5th question of the student whether conscience is ordered after the law - 5k
- Ch. 26: How recoveries in the king's courts to defeat tailed land stands with conscience - 26k
- Ch. 27: The 1st question of the student concerning tailed lands - 4k
- Ch. 28: The 2nd question of the student concerning tailed lands - 6k
- Ch. 29: The 3rd question of the student concerning tailed lands - 8k
- Ch. 30: The 4th question of the student concerning recoveries of inheritances intailed - 5k
- Ch. 31: The 5th question of the student concerning tailed lands - 8k
- Ch. 32: The 6th question of the student concerning tailed lands - 10k
DIALOGUE 2
- The Prologue and Introduction - 7k
- Ch. 1: The 1st question of the student whether a tenant may in conscience do waste - 11k
- Ch. 2: What is meant by this term, when it is said, Thus it was at the common law - 5k
- Ch. 3: The 2nd question of the student whether goods of outlaws be forfeit - 11k
- Ch. 4: The 3rd question of the student of waste done by a stranger in lands of a tenant - 10k
- Ch. 5: The 4th question of the student, whether a man may be of counsel - 7k
- Ch. 6: The 5th question of the student, whether a man may be of counsel - 6k
- Ch. 7: The 6th question of the student, whether a man may be of counsel - 7k
- Ch. 8: The 7th question of the student, whether a man is bound to make restitution - 7k
- Ch. 9: For what thing a man may lawfully distrain - 6k
- Ch. 10: The 8th question of the student, whether executors be bound in conscience - 11k
- Ch. 11: The 9th question of the student, whether the recipient of goods by legacy is bound in conscience to pay the debt upon a contract that the testator ought - 9k
- Ch. 12: The 10th question of the student, whether the youngest son be bound in conscience to pay the profits to the executors of the eldest brother for the time he lived - 7k
- Ch. 13: The 11th question of the student, as to damages a tenant in dower shall recover - 9k
- Ch. 14: The 12th question of the student, whether a claim be barred in conscience as in law - 4k
- Ch. 15: The 13th question of the student, whether a man whose wife dies before he can possess her land, in conscience shall be tenant by the courtesy - 8k
- Ch. 16: The 14th question of the student, whether rents be extinct in conscience - 12k
- Ch. 17: The 15th question of the student, whether rents be extinct in conscience - 7k
- Ch. 18: The 16th question of the student, whether a man who has a villein may with conscience keep lands to him and to his heirs, as he may by the law - 7k
- Ch. 19: The 17th question of the student, if a man counsels another that he has a right to land, and great suit and charges follow, what danger is this to him that gave counsel - 8k
- Ch. 20: The 18th question of the student, upon a feoffment made upon condition to pay rent to a stranger, how it shall weigh in law and conscience - 7k
- Ch. 21: The 19th question of the student, upon a feoffment in fee to pay rent to a stranger, how it shall weigh in law and conscience - 9k
- Ch. 22: How uses of land first began, and by what law - 11k
- Ch. 23: The diversity between the two cases discussed in chapters twenty and twenty-one - 10k
- Ch. 24: What is a nude contract, or naked promise, and whether any action may lie thereon - 16k
- Ch. 25: The twentieth question of the student, which of two sons shall inherit in conscience - 14k
- Ch. 26: Whether an abbot may present to an advowson without assent of the covent - 9k
- Ch. 27: If a man find beasts in his ground doing hurt, whether he may take and keep them - 6k
- Ch. 28: Whether a gift made by one under the age of twenty-five years be good - 6k
- Ch. 29: If a man be convict of heresy before the ordinary, whether his goods be forfeited - 4k
- Ch. 30: Where divers patrons of an advowson vary in their presentments, whether the bishop shall have liberty to present which of the incumbents that he will or not - 8k
- Ch. 31: How long time the patron shall have to present to a benefice - 7k li>Ch. 32: If a man be excommenged, whether he may be assoiled without making satisfaction - 7k
- Ch. 33: Whether a prelate may refuse a legacy - 9k
- Ch. 34: Whether a gift made under a condition be void, if the sovereign break the condition - 6k
- Ch. 35: Whether a covenant made upon a gift to the church, that it not be aliened, be good - 8k
- Ch. 36: If the patron present not within six months, who shall present - 12k
- Ch. 37: Whether the presentment and collation of all benefices and dignities, voiding at Rome, belongeth only to the pope - 7k
- Ch. 38: If a house by chance fall upon a horse that is borrowed, who shall bear the loss - 7k
- Ch. 39: If a priest have won much goods by saying of mass, whether he may give those goods, or make a will of them - 7k
- Ch. 40: Who shall succeed a clerk that dies intestate - 5k
- Ch. 41: If a man be outlawed of felony, or be attainted of murder or felony, or that is an Ascismus, may be slain by every stranger - 7k
- Ch. 42: Whether a man shall be bounden by the act or offense of his servant or officer - 17k
- Ch. 43: Whether a villein or a bondman may give away his goods - 8k
- Ch. 44: If a clerk be promoted to the title of his patrimony, and after sells his patrimony, and after falleth to poverty, whether shall he have his title therein - 10k
- Ch. 45: Questions taken by the student out of the Summa Rosella and Summa Angelica, which he thinketh necessary to be seen how they agree with the laws of the realm - 11k
- Ch. 46: Where ignorance of the law excuses in the laws of England, and where not - 12k
- Ch. 47: Certain cases and grounds where ignorance of the deed excuses, and where not - 8k
- Ch. 48: The 1st question of the doctor, how the law may be said reasonable, that prohibiteth them that be arraigned upon an indictment of felony or murder, to have counsel - 8k
- Ch. 49: The 2nd question of the doctor, whether the warranty of a younger brother taken as heir is a bar to the eldest brother - 8k
- Ch. 50: The 3rd question of the doctor, if a man prosecute a collateral warranty to extinct a right he knows another man hath to land, it be a bar in conscience - 7k
- Ch. 51: The 4th question of the doctor; of the wreck of the sea - 9k
- Ch. 52: The 5th question of the doctor, whether it stand with conscience to prohibit a jury of meat and drink till they be agreed of their verdict - 5k
- Ch. 53: The 6th question of the doctor, whether the colors that be given at the common law stand with conscience, because they be most commonly feigned - 12k
- Ch. 54: The 7th question of the doctor, concerning pleadings in assise, whereby the tenants sometimes plead in such manner that they shall confess no ouster t - 10k
- Ch. 55: The 8th question of the doctor, whether the statute of Sylva caedua, stand with conscience - 43k
ADDITIONS TO THE SECOND DIALOGUE
- Ch. 1: What power the parliament has over such things as be brought with dead bodies to their burials, and that be claimed by some curates to pertain to their church - 12k
- Ch. 2: Whether the parliament may enact, that no lands shall come hereafter into mortmain by license nor without license - 5k
- Ch. 3: Whether the parliament may break all appropriations that be made against any statute, or against the good order of the people - 6k
- Ch. 4: That all sanctuaries, and also who shall have his clergy, be under the power of the parliament, to order as they shall think convenient - 5k
- Ch. 5: What power the parliament has in the trees and grass in church-yards - 6k
- Ch. 6: What the parliament may do touching suits for dilapidations in the spiritual court - 5k
- Ch. 7: Whether parliament may enact that no priest shall wear any cloth made out of the realm, and whether it may order the salary of chaplains - 8k
- Ch. 8: If there were a schism in the papacy, what the parliament might do therein - 13k
- Ch. 9: If it were enacted, that if one call another thief or murderer, that the suit should be taken in the king's court, and not in the spiritual court, I think the statute were good - 5k
- Ch. 10: Whether parliament may enact, that no religious person shall receive into the habit of their religion any child under a certain age to be appointed by the parliament - 9k
- Ch. 11: Whether the parliament may prohibit, that no ordinary shall admit none to the order of priesthood, except they be sufficiently learned - 9k
- Ch. 12: Who shall have the tithes of the waste grounds that be within no parish, and what power the parliament has therein - 10k
- Ch. 13: What authority the parliament has concerning visitations - 9k

