WHAT IS A WERWOLF?
What is a werwolf? To this there
is no one very satisfactory reply. There are,
indeed, so many diverse views held with regard to the
nature and classification of werwolves, their existence
is so keenly disputed, and the subject is capable
of being regarded from so many standpoints, that any
attempt at definition in a restricted sense would be
well-nigh impossible.
The word werwolf (or werewolf) is
derived from the Anglo-Saxon wer, man, and
wulf, wolf, and has its equivalents in the German
Waehrwolf and French loup-garou, whilst
it is also to be found in the languages, respectively,
of Scandinavia, Russia, Austria-Hungary, the Balkan
Peninsula, and of certain of the countries of Asia
and Africa; from which it may be concluded that its
range is pretty well universal.
Indeed, there is scarcely a country
in the world in which belief in a werwolf, or in some
other form of lycanthropy, has not once existed, though
it may have ceased to exist now. But whereas in
some countries the werwolf is considered wholly physical,
in others it is looked upon as partly, if not entirely,
superphysical. And whilst in some countries it
is restricted to the male sex, in others it is confined
to the female; and, again, in others it is to be met
with in both sexes.
Hence, when asked to describe a werwolf,
or what is generally believed to be a werwolf, one
can only say that a werwolf is an anomaly-sometimes
man, sometimes woman (or in the guise of man or woman);
sometimes adult, sometimes child (or in the guise of
such)-that, under certain conditions, possesses
the property of metamorphosing into a wolf, the change
being either temporary or permanent.
This, perhaps, expresses most of what
is general concerning werwolves. For more particular
features, upon which I will touch later, one must
look to locality and time.
Those who are sceptical with regard
to the existence of the werwolf, and refuse to accept,
as proof of such existence, the accumulated testimony
of centuries, attribute the origin of the belief in
the phenomenon merely to an insane delusion, which,
by reason of its novelty, gained a footing and attracted
followers.
Humanity, they say, has ever been
the same; and any fresh idea-no matter
how bizarre or monstrous, so long as it is monstrous
enough-has always met with support and
won credence.
In favour of this argument it is pointed
out that in many of the cases of persons accused of
werwolfery, tried in France, and elsewhere, in the
middle of the sixteenth century, when belief in this
species of lycanthropy was at its zenith, there was
an extraordinary readiness among the accused to confess,
and even to give circumstantial evidence of their
own metamorphosis; and that this particular form of
self-accusation at length became so popular among the
leading people in the land, that the judicial court,
having its suspicions awakened, and, doubtless, fearful
of sentencing so many important personages, acquitted
the majority of the accused, announcing them to be
the victims of delusion and hysteria.
Now, if it were admitted, argue these
sceptics, that the bulk of so-called werwolves were
impostors, is it not reasonable to suppose that all
so-called werwolves were either voluntary or involuntary
impostors?-the latter, i.e., those
who were not self-accused, being falsely accused by
persons whose motive for so doing was revenge.
For parallel cases one has only to refer to the trials
for sorcery and witchcraft in England. And with
regard to false accusations of lycanthropy-accusations
founded entirely on hatred of the accused person-how
easy it was to trump up testimony and get the accused
convicted. The witnesses were rarely, if ever,
subjected to a searching examination; the court was
always biased, and a confession of guilt, when not
voluntary-as in the case of the prominent
citizen, when it was invariably pronounced due to
hysteria or delusion-could always be obtained
by means of torture, though a confession thus obtained,
needless to say, is completely nullified. Moreover,
we have no record of metamorphosis taking place in
court, or before witnesses chosen for their impartiality.
On the contrary, the alleged transmutations always
occurred in obscure places, and in the presence of
people who, one has reason to believe, were both hysterical
and imaginative, and therefore predisposed to see
wonders. So says this order of sceptic, and, to
my mind, he says a great deal more than his facts
justify; for although contemporary writers generally
are agreed that a large percentage of those people
who voluntarily confessed they were werwolves were
mere dissemblers, there is no recorded conclusive
testimony to show that all such self-accused persons
were shams and delusionaries. Besides, even if
such testimony were forthcoming, it would in nowise
preclude the existence of the werwolf.
Nor does the fact that all the accused
persons submitted to the rack, or other modes of torture,
confessed themselves werwolves prove that all such
confessions were false.
Granted also that some of the charges
of lycanthropy were groundless, being based on malice-which,
by the by, is no argument for the non-existence of
lycanthropy, since it is acknowledged that accusations
of all sorts, having been based on malice, have been
equally groundless-there is nothing in
the nature of written evidence that would justify
one in assuming that all such charges were traceable
to the same cause, i.e., a malicious agency.
Neither can one dismiss the testimony of those who
swore they were actual eye-witnesses of metamorphoses,
on the mere assumption that all such witnesses were
liable to hallucination or hysteria, or were hyper-imaginative.
Testimony to an event having taken
place must be regarded as positive evidence of such
an occurrence, until it can be satisfactorily proved
to be otherwise-and this is where the case
of the sceptic breaks down; he can only offer assumption,
not proof.
Another view, advanced by those who
discredit werwolves, is that belief in the existence
of such an anomaly originates in the impression made
on man in early times by the great elemental powers
of nature. It was, they say, man’s contemplation
of the changes of these great elemental powers of
nature, i.e., the changes of the sun and moon,
wind, thunder and lightning, of the day and night,
sunshine and rain, of the seasons, and of life and
death, and his deductions therefrom, that led to his
belief in and worship of gods that could assume varying
shapes, such, for example, as India (who occasionally
took the form of a bull), Derketo (who sometimes metamorphosed
into a fish), Poseidon, Jupiter Ammon, Milosh Kobilitch,
Minerva, and countless others-and that it
is to this particular belief and worship, which is
to be found in the mythology of every race, that all
religions, as well as belief in fairies, demons, werwolves,
and phantasms, may be traced.
Well, this might be so, if there were
not, in my opinion, sufficient accumulative corroborative
evidence to show that not only were there such anomalies
as werwolves formerly, but that, in certain restricted
areas, they are even yet to be encountered.
Taking, then, the actual existence
of werwolves to be an established fact, it is, of
course, just as impossible to state their origin as
it is to state the origin of any other extraordinary
form of creation. Every religious creed, every
Occult sect, advances its own respective views-and
has a perfect right to do so, as long as it advances
them as views and not dogmatisms.
I, for my part, bearing in mind that
everything appertaining to the creation of man and
the universe is a profound mystery, cannot see the
object on the part of religionists and scientists in
being arbitrary with regard to a subject which any
child of ten will apprehend to be one whereon it is
futile to do other than theorize. My own theory,
or rather one of my own theories, is that the property
of transmutation, i.e., the power of assuming
any animal guise, was one of the many properties-including
second sight, the property of becoming invisible at
will, of divining the presence of water, metals, the
advent of death, and of projecting the etherical body-which
were bestowed on man at the time of his creation;
and that although mankind in general is no longer
possessed of them, a few of these properties are still,
in a lesser degree, to be found among those of us
who are termed psychic.
The history of the Jews is full of
references to certain of these properties. The
greatest of all the Superphysical Forces-the
creating Force (the Hebrew Jäh, Jéhovah)-so
says the Bible, constantly held direct communication
with His elect-with Adam, Noah, Abraham,
and Moses, while His emissaries, the angels, or what
modern Occultists would term Benevolent Elementals,
conversed with Abraham, Sarah, Jacob, and hosts of
others. In this same history, too, there is no
lack of reference to sorcery; and whilst Black Magic
is illustrated in the tricks wrought by the magicians
before Pharaoh, and the infliction of all manner of
plagues upon the Egyptians, one is rather inclined
to attribute to White Magic Daniel’s safety
among the lions; Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego’s
preservation from the flames; Elijah’s miraculous
spinning out of the barrel of meal and cruse of oil,
in the days of famine, and his raising of the widow’s
son. Also, to the account of White Magic-and
should anyone dispute this point let me remind him
that it is merely a difference in the point of view-I
would add Elisha’s calling up of the bears that
made such short work of the naughty children who tormented
him. There are, too, many examples of divination
recorded in the Bible. In Genesis, chapter xxx.,
verses 27-43, a description is given of a divining
rod and its influence over sheep and other animals;
in Exodus, chapter xvii., verse 15, Moses with the
aid of a rod discovers water in the rock at Rephidim,
and for similar instances one has only to refer to
Exodus, chapter xiv., verse 16, and chapter xvii.,
verses 9-11. The calling up of the phantasm of
Samuel at Endor more than suggests a biblical precedent
for the modern practice of spiritualism; and it was,
undoubtedly, the abuse of such power as that possessed
by the witch of Endor, and the prevalence of sorcery,
such as she practised, that finally led to the decree
delivered by Moses to the Children of Israel, that
on no account were they to suffer a witch to live.
Reference to yet another property of the occult-namely, Etherical Projection-which is clearly exemplified
in the Scriptures, may be found in Numbers, chapter
xii., verse 6; in Job, chapter xxxiii., verse 15;
in the First Book of Kings, chapter iii., verse 5;
in Genesis, chapter xx., verses 3 and 6, and chapter
xxxi., verse 24; in Isaiah, Jeremiah, Nahum, and Zechariah;
and more particularly in the Acts of the Apostles,
and in the Revelation of St. John. Lastly, in
this history of the Jews, which is surely neither more
nor less authenticated than any other well established
history, testimony as to the existence of one species
of Elemental of much the same order as the werwolf
is recorded by Isaiah. In chapter xiii., verse
21, we read: “And their houses shall be
full of doleful creatures, and owls shall dwell there,
and satyrs shall dance there.” Satyrs! we
repeat; are not satyrs every whit as grotesque and
outrageous as werwolves? Why, then, should those
who, regarding the Scriptures as infallible, confess
to a belief in the satyr, reject the possibility of
a werwolf? And for those who are more logically
sceptical-who question the veracity of
the Bible and are dubious as to its authenticity-there
are the chronicles of Herodotus, Petronius Arbiter, Baronius, Dole, Olaus Magnus, Marie de France, Thomas
Aquinas, Richard Verstegan, and many other recognized
historians and classics, covering a large area in
the history of man, all of whom specially testify to
the existence-in their own respective periods-of werwolves.
And if any further evidence of this
once near relationship with the Other World is required,
one has only to turn to Aristotle, who wrote so voluminously
on psychic dreams (most of which I am inclined to think
were due to projection); to the teachings of Pythagoras
and his followers, Empedocles and Apollonius;
to Cicero and Tacitus; to Virgil, who frequently talks
of ghosts and seers of Tyana; to Plato, the exponent
of magic; and to Plutarch, whose works swarm with allusions
to Occultism of all kinds-phantasms of
the dead, satyrs, and numerous other species of Elementals.
I say, then, that in ages past, before
any of the artificialities appertaining to our present
mode of living were introduced; when the world was
but thinly populated and there were vast regions of
wild wastes and silent forests, the Known and Unknown
walked hand in hand. It was seclusion of this
kind, the seclusion of nature, that spirits loved,
and it was in this seclusion they were always to be
found whenever man wanted to hold communication with
them. To such silent spots-to the
woods and wildernesses-Buddha, Mohammed,
the Hebrew Patriarchs and Prophets, all, in their
turn, resorted, to solicit the companionship of benevolently
disposed spirits, to be tutored by them, and, in all
probability, to receive from them additional powers.
To these wastes and forests, too, went all those who
wished to do ill. There they communed with the
spirits of darkness, i.e., demons, or what are
also termed Vice Elementals; and from the latter they
acquired-possibly in exchange for some
of their own vitality, for spirits of this order are
said to have envied man his material body-tuition
in sorcery, and such properties as second sight, invisibility,
and lycanthropy.
This property of lycanthropy, or metamorphosing
into a beast, probably dates back to man’s creation.
It was, I am inclined to believe, conferred on man
at his creation by Malevolent Forces that were antagonistic
to man’s progress; and that these Malevolent
Forces had a large share in the creation of this universe
is, to my mind, extremely probable. But, however
that may be, I cannot believe that the creation of
man and the universe were due entirely to one Creator-there
are assuredly too many inconsistencies in all we see
around us to justify belief in only one Creative Force.
The Creator who inspired man with love-love
for his fellow beings and love of the beautiful-could
not be the same Creator who framed that irredeemably
cruel principle observable throughout nature, i.e.,
the survival of the fittest; the preying of the stronger
on the weaker-of the tiger on the feebler
beasts of the jungle; the eagle on the smaller birds
of the air; the wolf on the sheep; the shark on the
poor, defenceless fish, and so on; neither could He
be the Creator that deals in diseases-foul
and filthy diseases, common, not only to all divisions
of the human species, but to quadrupeds, birds, fish,
and even flora; that brings into existence cripples
and idiots, the blind, the deaf and dumb; and watches
with passive inertness the most acute sufferings,
not only of adults, but of sinless children and all
manner of helpless animals. No! It is impossible
to conceive that such incompatibilities can be the
work of one Creator. But, supposing, for the
sake of argument, we may admit the possibility of
only one Creator, we cannot concede that this Creator
is at the same time both omnipotent and merciful.
My own belief, which is merely based on common sense
and observation, is that this earth was created by
many Forces-that everything that makes for
man’s welfare is due to Benevolent Forces; and
that everything that tends to his detriment is due
to antagonistic Malevolent Forces; and that the Malevolent
Forces exist for the very simple reason that the Benevolent
Forces are not sufficiently powerful to destroy them.
These Malevolent Forces, then-the
originators of all evil-created werwolves;
and the property of lycanthropy becoming in many cases
hereditary, there were families that could look back
upon countless generations possessed of it. But
lycanthropy did not remain in the exclusive possession
of a few families; the bestowal of it continued long
after its original creation, and I doubt if this bestowal
has, even now, become entirely a thing of the past.
There are still a few regions-desolate
and isolated regions in Europe (in Russia, Scandinavia,
and even France), to say nothing of Asia, Africa and
America, Australasia and Polynesia-which
are unquestionably the haunts of Vagrarians, Barrowvians,
and other kinds of undesirable Elementals, and it
is quite possible that, through the agency of these
spirits, the property of lycanthropy might be acquired
by those who have learned in solitude how to commune
with them.
I have already referred to the werwolf
as an anomaly, and for its designation I do not think
I could have chosen a more suitable term. Though
its movements and actions are physical-for
what could be more material than the act of devouring
flesh and blood?-the actual process of
the metamorphosis savours of the superphysical; whilst
to still further strengthen its relationship with
the latter, its appearance is sometimes half man and
half wolf, which is certainly more than suggestive
of the semi-human and by no means uncommon type of
Elemental. Its inconsistency, too, which is a
striking characteristic of all psychic phenomena,
is also suggestive of the superphysical; and there
is certainly neither consistency as to the nature of
the metamorphosis-which is sometimes brought
about at will and sometimes entirely controlled by
the hour of day, or by the seasons-nor as
to the outward form of the werwolf, which is sometimes
merely that of a wolf, and sometimes partly wolf and
partly human; nor as to its shape at the moment of
death, when in some cases there is metamorphosis, whilst
in other cases there is no metamorphosis. Nor
is this inconsistency only characteristic of the movements,
actions, and shape of the werwolf. It is also
characteristic of it psychologically. When the
metamorphosis is involuntary, and is enforced by agencies
over which the subject has no control, the werwolf,
though filled with all the passions characteristic
of a beast of prey, when a wolf, is not of necessity
cruel and savage when a human being, that is to say,
before the transmutations take place. There
are many instances of such werwolves being, as people,
affectionate and kindly disposed. On the other
hand, in some cases of involuntary metamorphosis,
and in the majority of cases of voluntary metamorphosis-that
is to say, when the transmutation is compassed by
means of magic-the werwolf, as a person,
is evilly disposed, and as a wolf shows a distinct
blending of the beast with the passions, subtle ingenuity,
and reasoning powers of the human being. From
this it is obvious, then, that the werwolf is a hybrid
of the material and immaterial-of man and
Elemental, known and Unknown. The latter term
does not, of course, meet with acceptance at the hands
of the Rationalists, who profess to believe that all
phenomena can be explained by perfectly natural causes.
They suggest that belief in the werwolf (as indeed
in all other forms of lycanthropy) is traceable to
the craving for blood which is innate in certain natures
and is sometimes accompanied by hallucination, the
subject genuinely believing himself to be a wolf (or
whatever beast of prey is most common in the district),
and, in imitation of that animal’s habits, committing
acts of devastation at night, selecting his victims
principally from among women and children-those,
in fact, who are too feeble to resist him.
Often, however, say these Rationalists,
there is no suggestion of hallucination, the question
resolving itself into one of vulgar trickery.
The anthropophagi, unable to suppress their appetite
for human food, taking advantage of the general awe
in which the wolf is held by their neighbours, dress
themselves up in the skins of that beast, and prowling
about lonely, isolated spots at night, pounce upon
those people they can most easily overpower.
Rumours (most probably started by the murderers themselves)
speedily get in circulation that the mangled and half-eaten
remains of the villagers are attributable to creatures,
half human and half wolf, that have been seen gliding
about certain places after dark. The simple country-folk,
among whom superstitions are rife, are only too ready
to give credence to such reports; the existence of
the monsters becomes an established thing, whilst the
localities that harbour them are regarded with horror,
and looked upon as the happy hunting ground of every
imaginable occult power of evil.
Now, although such an explanation
of werwolves might be applicable in certain districts
of West Africa, where the native population is excessively
bloodthirsty and ignorant, it could not for one moment
be applied to werwolfery in Germany, France, or Scandinavia,
where the peasantry are, generally speaking, kindly
and intelligent people, whom one could certainly accuse
neither of being sanguinary nor of possessing any
natural taste for cannibalism.
The rationalist view can therefore
only be said to be feasible in certain limited spheres,
outside of which it is grotesque and ridiculous.
Now a question that has occurred to
me, and which, I fancy, may give rise to some interesting
speculation, is, whether some of the werwolves stated
to have been seen may not have been some peculiar type
of phantasm. I make this suggestion because I
have seen several sub-human and sub-animal occult
phenomena in England, and have, too, met other people
who have had similar experiences.
With our limited knowledge of the
Unknown it is, of course, impossible to be arbitrary
as to the class of spirits to which such phenomena
belong. They may be Vice Elementals, i.e.,
spirits that have never inhabited any material body,
whether human or animal, and which are wholly inimical
to man’s progress-such spirits assume
an infinite number of shapes, agreeable and otherwise;
or they may be phantasms of dead human beings-vicious
and carnal-minded people, idiots, and imbecile epileptics.
It is an old belief that the souls of cataleptic and
epileptic people, during the body’s unconsciousness,
adjourned temporarily to animals, and it is therefore
only in keeping with such a view to suggest that on
the deaths of such people their spirits take permanently
the form of animals. This would account for the
fact that places where cataleptics and idiots have
died are often haunted by semi and by wholly animal
types of phantasms.
According to Paracelsus Man has in
him two spirits-an animal spirit and a
human spirit-and that in after life he appears
in the shape of whichever of these two spirits he
has allowed to dominate him. If, for example,
he has obeyed the spirit that prompts him to be sober
and temperate, then his phantasm resembles a man;
but on the other hand, if he has given way to his
carnal and bestial cravings, then his phantasm is
earthbound, in the guise of some terrifying and repellent
animal-maybe a wolf, bear, dog, or cat-all
of which shapes are far from uncommon in psychic manifestations.
This view has been held either in
toto, or with certain reservations, by many other
writers on the subject, and I, too, in a great measure
endorse it-its pronouncement of a limit
to man’s phantasms being, perhaps, the only
important point to which I cannot accede. My own
view is that so complex a creature as man-complex
both physically and psychologically-may
have a representative spirit for each of his personalities.
Hence on man’s physical dissolution there may
emanate from him a host of phantasms, each with a
shape most fitting the personality it represents.
And what more thoroughly representative of cruelty,
savageness, and treachery than a wolf, or even something
partly lupine! Therefore, as I have suggested
elsewhere, in some instances, but emphatically not
in all, what were thought to have been werwolves may
only have been phantasms of the dead, or Elementals.