Page:Curious myths of the Middle Ages (1876).djvu/33

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He is said to have appeared in Naumburg, but the date is not given; he was noticed in church, listening to the sermon. After the service he was questioned, and he related his story. On this occasion he received presents from the burghers[1]. In 1633 he was again in Hamburg[2]. In the year 1640, two citizens, living in the Gerberstrasse, in Brussels, were walking in the Sonian wood, when they encountered an aged man, whose clothes were in tatters and of an antiquated appearance. They invited him to go with them to a house of refreshment, and he went with them, but would not seat himself, remaining on foot to drink. When he came before the doors with the two burghers, he told them a great deal, but they were mostly stories of events which had happened many hundred years before. Hence the burgers gathered that their companion was Isaac Laquedem, the Jew who had refused to permit our Blessed Lord to rest for a moment at his doorstep, and they left him full of terror. In 1642 he is reported to have visited Leipzig. According to Peck’s “History of Stamford,” Upon Whitsunday, in the year of our Lord 1658, “about six of the clock, just after evensong,”

  1. Mitternacht, Diss. in Johann. xxi. 19.
  2. Mitternacht, ut supra.