THE WEHR-WOLF.
’Twas the hour of sunset.
The eastern horizon, with its gloomy
and somber twilight, offered a strange contrast to
the glorious glowing hues of vermilion, and purple,
and gold, that blended in long streaks athwart the
western sky.
For even the winter sunset of Italy
is accompanied with resplendent tints as
if an emperor, decked with a refulgent diadem, were
repairing to his imperial couch.
The declining rays of the orb of light
bathed in molten gold the pinnacles, steeples, and
lofty palaces of proud Florence, and toyed with the
limpid waves of the Arno, on whose banks innumerable
villas and casinos already sent forth delicious strains
of music, broken only by the mirth of joyous revelers.
And by degrees as the sun went down,
the palaces of the superb city began to shed light
from their lattices, set in rich sculptured masonry;
and here and there, where festivity prevailed, grand
illuminations sprung up with magical quickness, the
reflection from each separate galaxy rendering it
bright as day far, far around.
Vocal and instrumental melody floated
through the still air; and the perfume of exotics,
decorating the halls of the Florentine nobles, poured
from the widely-opened portals, and rendered the air
delicious.
For Florence was gay that evening the
last day of each month being the one which the wealthy
lords and high-born ladies set apart for the reception
of their friends.
The sun sank behind the western hills;
and even the hothouse flowers closed up their buds as
if they were eyelids weighed down by slumber, and
not to wake until the morning should arouse them again
to welcome the return of their lover that
glorious sun!
Darkness seemed to dilate upon the
sky like an image in the midst of a mirage, expanding
into superhuman dimensions then rapidly
losing its shapeliness, and covering the vault above
densely and confusedly.
But, by degrees, countless stars began
to stud the colorless canopy of heaven, like gems
of orient splendor; for the last last flickering
ray of the twilight in the west had expired in the
increasing obscurity.
But, hark! what is that wild and fearful cry?
In the midst of a wood of evergreens
on the banks of the Arno, a man young,
handsome, and splendidly attired has thrown
himself upon the ground, where he writhes like a stricken
serpent, in horrible convulsions.
He is the prey of a demoniac excitement:
an appalling consternation is on him madness
is in his brain his mind is on fire.
Lightnings appear to gleam from his
eyes, as if his soul were dismayed, and withering
within his breast.
“Oh! no no!”
he cries with a piercing shriek, as if wrestling madly,
furiously, but vainly against some unseen fiend that
holds him in his grasp.
And the wood echoes to that terrible
wail; and the startled bird flies fluttering from
its bough.
But, lo! what awful change is taking
place in the form of that doomed being? His handsome
countenance elongates into one of savage and brute-like
shape; the rich garments which he wears become a rough,
shaggy, and wiry skin; his body loses its human contours,
his arms and limbs take another form; and, with a
frantic howl of misery, to which the woods give horribly
faithful reverberations, and, with a rush like a hurling
wind, the wretch starts wildly away, no longer a man,
but a monstrous wolf!
On, on he goes: the wood is cleared the
open country is gained. Tree, hedge, and isolated
cottage appear but dim points in the landscape a
moment seen, the next left behind; the very hills appear
to leap after each other.
A cemetery stands in the monster’s
way, but he turns not aside through the
sacred inclosure on, on he goes. There
are situated many tombs, stretching up the slope of
a gentle acclivity, from the dark soil of which the
white monuments stand forth with white and ghastly
gleaming, and on the summit of the hill is the church
of St. Benedict the Blessed.
From the summit of the ivy-grown tower
the very rooks, in the midst of their cawing, are
scared away by the furious rush and the wild howl with
which the Wehr-Wolf thunders over the hallowed ground.
At the same instant a train of monks
appear round the angle of the church for
there is a funeral at that hour; and their torches
flaring with the breeze that is now springing up,
cast an awful and almost magical light on the dark
gray walls of the edifice, the strange effect being
enhanced by the prismatic reflection of the lurid blaze
from the stained glass of the oriel window.
The solemn spectacle seemed to madden
the Wehr-Wolf. His speed increased he
dashed through the funeral train appalling
cries of terror and alarm burst from the lips of the
holy fathers and the solemn procession
was thrown into confusion. The coffin-bearers
dropped their burden, and the corpse rolled out upon
the ground, its decomposing countenance seeming horrible
by the glare of the torch-light.
The monk who walked nearest the head
of the coffin was thrown down by the violence with
which the ferocious monster cleared its passage; and
the venerable father on whose brow sat the
snow of eighty winters fell with his head
against a monument, and his brains were dashed out.
On, on fled the Wehr-Wolf, over mead
and hill, through valley and dale. The very wind
seemed to make way: he clove the air he
appeared to skim the ground to fly.
Through the romantic glades and rural
scenes of Etruria the monster sped sounds,
resembling shrieking howls, bursting ever and anon
from his foaming mouth his red eyes glaring
in the dusk of the evening like ominous meteors and
his whole aspect so full of appalling ferocity, that
never was seen so monstrous, so terrific a spectacle!
A village is gained; he turns not
aside, but dashes madly through the little street
formed by the huts and cottages of the Tuscan vine-dressers.
A little child is in his path a
sweet, blooming, ruddy, noble boy; with violet-colored
eyes and flaxen hair disporting merrily
at a short distance from his parents, who are seated
at the threshold of their dwelling.
Suddenly a strange and ominous rush an
unknown trampling of rapid feet falls upon their ears;
then, with a savage cry, a monster sweeps past.
“My child! my child!”
screams the affrighted mother; and simultaneously
the shrill cry of an infant in the sudden agony of
death carries desolation to the ear!
’Tis done ’twas
but the work of a moment; the wolf has swept by, the
quick rustling of his feet is no longer heard in the
village. But those sounds are succeeded by awful
wails and heart-rending lamentations: for the
child the blooming, violet-eyed, flaxen-haired
boy the darling of his poor but tender
parents, is weltering in his blood!
On, on speeds the destroyer, urged
by an infernal influence which maddens the more intensely
because its victim strives vainly to struggle against
it: on, on, over the beaten road over
the fallow field over the cottager’s
garden over the grounds of the rich one’s
rural villa.
And now, to add to the horrors of
the scene, a pack of dogs have started in pursuit
of the wolf dashing hurrying pushing pressing
upon one another in all the anxious ardor of the chase.
The silence and shade of the open
country, in the mild starlight, seem eloquently to
proclaim the peace and happiness of a rural life; but
now that silence is broken by the mingled howling
of the wolf, and the deep baying of the hounds and
this shade is crossed and darkened by the forms of
the animals as they scour so fleetly oh!
with such whirlwind speed along.
But that Wehr-Wolf bears a charmed
life; for though the hounds overtake him fall
upon him and attack him with all the courage
of their nature, yet does he hurl them from him, toss
them aside, spurn them away, and at length free himself
from their pursuit altogether!
And now the moon rises with unclouded
splendor, like a maiden looking from her lattice screened
with purple curtains; and still the monster hurries
madly on with unrelaxing speed.
For hours has he pursued his way thus
madly; and, on a sudden, as he passes the outskirts
of a sleeping town, the church-bell is struck by the
watcher’s hand to proclaim midnight.
Over the town, over the neighboring
fields through the far-off forest, clanged
that iron tongue: and the Wehr-Wolf sped all the
faster, as if he were running a race with that Time
whose voice had just spoken.
On, on went the Wehr-Wolf; but now
his course began to deviate from the right line which
he had hitherto pursued, and to assume a curved direction.
From a field a poor man was turning
an ox into the main road, that he might drive the
animal to his master’s residence by daylight;
the wolf swept by, and snapped furiously at the ox
as he passed: and the beast, affrighted by the
sudden appearance, gushing sound, and abrupt though
evanescent attack of the infuriate monster, turned
on the herdsman and gored him to death.
On went the terrific wolf, with wilder
and more frequent howlings, which were answered in
a thousand tones from the rocks and caverns overlooking
the valley through whose bosom he was now careering
with whirlwind speed along.
It was now two o’clock in the
morning, and he had already described an immense circuit
from the point where he had begun to deviate from a
direct course.
At a turning of the road, as he emerged
from the valley, the monster encountered a party of
village girls repairing with the produce of their
dairies, and of their poultry-yards, to some still
far distant town, which they had hoped to reach shortly
after daybreak.
Fair, gay, and smiling was the foremost
maiden, as the bright moon and the silver starlight
shone upon her countenance; but that sweet face, clad
in the richest hues of health, was suddenly convulsed
with horror, as the terrible Wehr-Wolf thundered by
with appalling howls.
For a few moments the foremost village
maiden stood rooted to the spot in speechless horror:
then, uttering a wild cry, she fell backward, rolled
down a steep bank, and was ingulfed in the rapid stream
that chafed and fretted along the side of the path.
Her companions shrieked in agony of
mind the wail was echoed by a despairing
cry from the drowning girl a cry that swept
frantically over the rippling waters; and, in another
moment, she sank to rise no more!
The breeze had by this time increased
to a sharp wind, icy and cold, as it usually is, even
in southern climes, when the dawn is approaching;
and the gale now whistled through the branches of the
evergreen wood in the neighborhood of Florence that
vicinity to which the Wehr-Wolf was at length returning!
Still was his pace of arrow-like velocity for
some terrible power appeared to urge him on; and though
his limbs failed not, though he staggered not in his
lightning speed, yet did the foam at his mouth, the
thick flakes of perspiration on his body, and the steam
that enveloped him as in a dense vapor, denote how
distressed the unhappy being in reality was.
At last at last a faint
tinge was visible above the eastern horizon; gradually
the light increased and put to flight the stars.
But now the Oriental sky was to some
extent obscured with clouds; and the Wehr-Wolf gnashed
his teeth with rage, and uttered a savage howl, as
if impatient of the delay of dawn.
His speed began to relax; the infernal
influence which had governed him for so many hours
already grew less stern, less powerful, and as the
twilight shone forth more plainly in proportion did
the Wehr-Wolf’s velocity diminish.
Suddenly a piercing chill darted through
his frame, and he fell in strong convulsions upon
the ground, in the midst of the same wood where his
transformation had taken place on the preceding evening.
The sun rose angrily, imparting a
lurid, reddened hue to the dark clouds that hung upon
the Oriental heaven, as if the mantling curtains of
a night’s pavilion strove to repel the wooing
kisses of the morn; and the cold chill breeze made
the branches swing to and fro with ominous flapping,
like the wings of the fabulous Simoorg.
But in the midst of the appalling
spasmodic convulsions, with direful writhings on the
soil, and with cries of bitter anguish, the Wehr-Wolf
gradually threw off his monster-shape; and at the very
moment when the first sunbeam penetrated the wood
and glinted on his face he rose a handsome, young,
and perfect man once more!