Page:Curious myths of the Middle Ages (1876).djvu/36

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the scene of which he places in the Staffordshire Moorlands. He there appears in a “purple shag gown,” and prescribes balm-leaves[1]

On the 22nd July, 1721, he appeared at the gates of the city of Munich[2]. About the end of the seventeenth century or the beginning of the eighteenth, an impostor, calling himself the Wandering Jew, attracted attention in England, and was listened to by the ignorant, and despised by the educated. He however managed to thrust himself into the notice of the nobility, who, half in jest, half in curiosity, questioned him, and paid him as they might a juggler. He declared that he had been an officer of the Sanhedrim, and that he had struck Christ as he left the judgment hall of Pilate. He remembered all the Apostles, and described their personal appearance, their clothes, and their peculiarities. He spoke many languages, claimed the power of healing the sick, and asserted that he had travelled nearly all over the world. Those who heard him were perplexed by his familiarity with foreign tongues and places. Oxford and Cambridge sent professors to question him, and to discover the

  1. Notes and Queries, vol. xii. No. 322.
  2. Hormayr, Taschenbuch, 1834, p. 216.