THE SPIRITS OF WERWOLVES
It seems that there is a disposition
in certain minds to associate lycanthropy with the
doctrine of the transmigration of souls. A brief
examination of the latter will, however, suffice to
show there is very little analogy between the two.
Transmigration of souls, a metempsychosis,
deals solely with the passing of the soul after death
into another mortal form. Lycanthropy confines
itself to the metamorphosis of physical man to animal
form only during man’s physical lifetime.
Metempsychosis is a change of condition
dependent on the principle of evolution (i.e.
evolution upward and retrogressive). Lycanthropy
is a change of condition relative to a property, entirely
independent of evolution. The one is wholly determined
by man’s spiritual state at the time of his
physical dissolution; the other is simply a faculty
of sense, either handed down to man by his forefathers
or acquired by man, during his lifetime, through the
knowledge and practice of magic.
There are absolutely no grounds, other
than purely hypothetical ones, for supposing a werwolf
to be a reincarnation; but on the other hand there
is reason to believe that the wolf personality of the
werwolf, at the latter’s physical dissolution,
remains earthbound in the form of a lupine phantasm.
So that although there is nothing to associate lycanthropy
with metempsychosis, there is, at all events, something
in common between lycanthropy and animism. Animism,
be it understood, holds that every living thing, whether
man, beast, reptile, insect, or vegetable, has a representative
spirit.
As an example of a lupine phantasm
representing the personality of the werwolf, I will
quote a case, reported to me some years ago as having
occurred in Estonia, on the shores of the Baltic.
A gentleman and his sister, whom I will call Stanislaus
and Anno D’Adhemar, were invited to spend a
few weeks with their old friends, the Baron and Baroness
Von A-, at their country home in
Estonia. On the day arranged, they set out for
their friends’ house, and alighting at a little
station, within twenty miles of their destination,
were met by the Baron’s droshky. It was
one of those exquisite evenings-a night
light without moon, a day shady without clouds-peculiar
to that clime. Indeed, it seemed as if the last
glow of the evening and the first grey of the morning
had melted together, and as if all the luminaries
of the sky merely rested their beams without withdrawing
them. To Stanislaus and Anno, jaded with the
wear and tear of life in a big city, the calm and quiet
of the country-side was most refreshing, and they
heaved great sighs of contentment as they leaned far
back amid the luxurious upholstery of the carriage,
and drew in deep breaths of the smokeless, pure, scented
air. Their surroundings modelled their thoughts.
Instead of discussing monetary matters, which had
so long been uppermost in their minds, they discoursed
on the wonderful economy of happiness in a world full
of toil and struggle; the fewer the joys, they argued,
the higher the enjoyment, till the last and highest
joy of all, true peace of mind, i.e., content,
was the one joy found to contain every other joy.
Occasionally they paused to remark on the brilliant
lustre of the stars, and, not infrequently, alluded
to the Creator’s graciousness in allowing them
to behold such beauty. Occasionally, too, they
would break off in the midst of their conversation
to listen to the plaintive utterings of some night
bird or the shrill cry of a startled hare. The
rate at which they were progressing-for
the horses were young and fresh-speedily
brought them to an end of the open country, and they
found themselves suddenly immersed in the deepening
gloom of a dense and extensive forest of pines.
The track now was not quite so smooth; here and there
were big ruts, and Stanislaus and his sister were
subjected to such a vigorous bumping that they had
to hold on to the sides of the droshky, and to one
another. In the altered conditions of their travel,
conversation was well-nigh impossible. The little
they attempted was unceremoniously jerked out of them,
and the nature of it-I am loath to admit-had
somewhat deteriorated. It had, in fact, in accordance
with their surroundings, undergone a considerable
change.
“What a vile road!” Stanislaus
exclaimed, clutching the side of the droshky with
both hands to save himself from being precipitated
into space.
“Yes-isn’t-it?”
gasped Anno, as she lunged forward, and in a vain
attempt to regain her seat fell on their handbag, which
gave an ominous squish. “I declare there-there-will
be-nothing left of me-by the-by
the time we get there. Oh dear! Whatever
shall I do? Wherever have you got to, Stanislaus?”
The upper half of Stanislaus was nowhere
to be seen! His lower half, however, was discovered
by his sister convulsively pressed against the side
of the droshky. In another moment this, too, would
undoubtedly have disappeared, and the lower extremities
would have gone in pursuit of the upper, had not Anno
with admirable presence of mind effected a rescue.
She tugged at her brother’s coat-tails in the
very nick of time, with the result that his whole
body once again hove into view.
Just then a bird sang its final song
before retiring for the night, and Stanislaus, hot
and trembling all over, shouted out: “What
a hideous noise! I declare it quite frightened
me”; whilst Anno shuddered and put her fingers
in her ears. They once more abused the road; then
the trees. “Great ugly things,” they
said; “they shut out all the light.”
And then they abused the driver for not looking out
where he was going, and finally they began to abuse
one another. Anno abused Stanislaus, because
he had disarranged her hat and hair, and Stanislaus,
Anno, because he couldn’t hear all she said,
and because what he did hear was silly. Then
the Stygian darkness of the great pines grew; and the
silence of wonder fell on the two quarrellers.
On, on, on rolled the droshky, a monotonous rumble,
rumble, that sounded very loud amid the intense hush
that had suddenly fallen on the forest. Stanislaus
and Anno grew drowsy; the cold night air, crowning
their exertions of the day, induced sleep, and they
were soon very much in the land of nods: Stanislaus
with his head thrust back as far as it would go, and
Anno with her head leaning slightly forward and her
chin deeply rooted in the silvery recesses of her rich
fur coat.
The driver stopped for a moment.
He had to attend to his lights, which, he reflected,
were behaving in rather an odd manner. Then, scratching
his head thoughtfully, he cracked his whip and drove
hurriedly on. Once again, rumble, rumble, rumble;
and no other sounds but far away echoes and the gentle
cooing of a soft night breeze through the forked and
ragged branches of the sad and stately pines.
On, on, on, the light uncertain and the horses brisk.
Suddenly the driver hears something-he
strains his ears to catch the meaning of the sounds-a
peculiar, quick patter, patter-coming from
far away in the droshky’s wake. There is
something-he can’t exactly tell what-in
those sounds he doesn’t like; they are human,
and yet not human; they may proceed from some one
running-some one tall and lithe, with an
unusually long stride. They may-and
he casts a shuddering look over his shoulder as the
thought strikes him-they may be nothing
human-they may be the patter of a wolf!
A huge, gaunt, hungry wolf! an abnormally big wolf!
a wolf with a gallop like that of a horse! The
driver was new to these parts; he had but lately come
from the Baron’s establishment in St. Petersburg.
He had never been in this wood after dark, and he
had never seen a wolf save in the Zoological Gardens.
The atmosphere now began to sharpen. From being
merely cold it became positively icy, and muttering,
“I never felt anything like this in St. Petersburg,”
the driver shrank into the depths of his furs, and
tried to settle himself more comfortably in his seat.
The horses, too, four in number, were strangers in
Estonia, the Baron having only recently paid a heavy
price for them in Nava on account of their beauty.
Not that they were merely handsome; despite their small
and graceful build, and the glossy sleekness of their
coats, they were both strong and spirited, and could
cover twenty-five versts without a pause. But
now they, too, heard the sounds-there was
no doubt of that-and felt the cold.
At first they shivered, then whined, and then came
to an abrupt halt; and then, without the slightest
warning, tore the shifting tag and rag tight around
them, and bounding forward, were off like the wind.
Then, away in their rear, and plainly audible above
the thunder of their hoofs, came a moaning, snarling,
drawn-out cry, which was almost instantly repeated,
not once, but again and again.
Stanislaus and Anno, who had been
rudely awakened from their slumbers by the unusual
behaviour of the horses, were now on the qui vive.
“Good heavens! What’s that?”
they cried in chorus.
“What’s that, coachman?”
shrieked Anno, digging the shivering driver in the
back.
“Volki, mistress, volki!”
was the reply, and on flew the droshky faster, faster,
faster!
To Stanislaus and Anno the word “wolves”
came as a stunning shock. All the tales they
had ever heard of these ferocious beasts crowded their
minds at once. Wolves! was it possible that those
dreadful bogies of their childhood-those
grim and awful creatures, grotesquely but none the
less vividly portrayed in their imagination by horror-loving
nurses-were actually close at hand!
Supposing the brutes caught them, who would be eaten
first? Anno, Stanislaus, or the driver? Would
they devour them with their clothes on? If not,
how would they get them off? Then, filled with
morbid curiosity, they strained their ears and listened.
Again-this time nearer, much nearer-came
that cry, dismal, protracted, nerve-racking.
Nor was that all, for they could now discern the pat-pat,
pat-pat of footsteps-long, soft, loping
footsteps, as of huge furry paws or naked human feet.
However, they could see nothing-nothing
but blackness, intensified by the feeble flickering
of the droshky’s lanterns.
“Faster! drive faster!”
Anno shouted, turning round and poking the coachman
in the ribs with her umbrella. “Do you want
us all to be eaten?”
“I can’t mistress, I can’t!”
the man expostulated; “the horses are outstripping
the wind as it is. They can’t go quicker.”
And the driver, consigning Stanislaus and his sister
to the innermost recesses of hell, prayed to the Virgin
to save him.
Nearer and nearer drew the steps,
and again a cry-a cry close behind them,
perhaps fifty yards-fifty yards at the most.
And as they were trying to locate it there burst into
view a gigantic figure-nude and luminous,
a figure that glowed like a glow-worm and bent slightly
forward as it ran. It covered the ground with
long, easy, swinging strides, without any apparent
effort. In general form its body was like that
of a man, saving that the limbs were longer and covered
with short hair, and the feet and hands, besides being
larger as a whole, had longer toes and fingers.
Its head was partly human, partly lupine-the
skull, ears, teeth, and eyes were those of a wolf,
whilst the remaining features were those of a man.
Its complexion was devoid of colour, startlingly white;
its eyes green and lurid, its expression hellish.
Stanislaus and Anno did not know what
to make of it. Was it some terrible monstrosity
that had escaped from a show, or something that was
peculiar to the forest itself, something generated
by the giant trees and dark, silent road? In
their sublime terror they shrieked aloud, beat the
air with their hands to ward it off, and finally left
their seats to cling on to the back of the driver’s
box.
But it came nearer, nearer, and nearer,
until they were almost within reach of its arms.
They read death in the glinting greenness of its eyes
and in the flashing of its long bared teeth. The
climax of their agony, they argued, could no longer
be postponed. The thing had only to make a grab
at them and they would die of horror-die
even before it touched them. But this was not
to be.
They were still staring into the pale
malevolent face drawing nearer and nearer, and wondering
when the long twitching fingers would catch them by
the throats, when the droshky with a mad swirl forward
cleared the forest, and they found themselves gazing
wildly into empty moonlit space, with no sign of their
pursuer anywhere.
An hour later they narrated their
adventure to the Baron. Nothing could have exceeded
his distress. “My dear friends!” he
said, “I owe you a profound apology. I
ought to have told my man to choose any other road
rather than that through the forest, which is well
known to be haunted. According to rumour, a werwolf-we
have good reason to believe in werwolfs here-was
killed there many years ago.”