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LEGENDS AND ANECDOTES
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by the use of which her limbs quickly became as smooth, white, and comely as if they had been of cast silver. “Ever since that time,” says a famous, learned, and veracious Arab historian,[1] “people have used bathing and depilatories, and it is said that the bath-house is the same that is situated at the Bâb el Asbât, close to the Medresset es Salahiyeh,[2] and that it is the first bath-house ever built.”


V

DETECTIVE STORIES

In the early part of the eighteenth century the learned Rabbinnical writer Kolonimos was head of the small, and greatly oppressed Jewish community at Jerusalem.

One Sabbath day, the Rabbi was at his devotions at the Jews’ Wailing-place, when the “Shamash” or verger of the Synagogue came, breathless with haste and fear, to tell him that the town was in an uproar, and that the Mohammedans were threatening to exterminate the Jews, because a Moslem boy had been found slain in the Jewish Quarter. He had not finished his tale when a party of Moslems came up and began to beat the Rabbi, dragging him off towards the serai. The Pasha, at sight of him, pointed to the body of the murdered lad, which had also been brought before him, and sternly told the Rabbi that

  1. Mejr-ed-dìn. “Uns El Jelìl,” vol. i. p. 125.
  2. Now St Anne’s Church.