When the sportsman does not absolutely
care about sleeping in his own bed, and will not be
denied the pleasure of shooting a wolf himself, a
drag is run similar to those we have already mentioned,
but other parts of the proceedings are conducted in
a manner widely different. In the first place,
there is no trap; then, instead of the piece of flesh,
the great attraction, being put in an obscure and
hidden path, it should, on the contrary, be placed
in an open spot, on the border of a wood, in a glade,
or in a field on the verge of the forest, in order
that the sportsman who is laying in wait, in ambush,
may be able to see what is passing; he must, too,
conceal himself as much as possible, either in a thicket
under the foliage, in a hut made with the boughs of
trees, or in a hole dug in the ground; but he should
always be so placed that he is against the wind, and
if the moon is up he ought to take especial care that
he is in the shade.
But it sometimes happens that the
sportsman, at a moment when there is no time to run
a drag, for instance, after dinner when
smoking a cigar, he suddenly takes it into his head
to kill a wolf, and it is too late to bait the spot;
nevertheless the hunter will have nothing less than
his wolf. Before leaving home, therefore, he
orders his servant to bring him a duck; this he puts
into his pocket, and shouldering his gun, seeks the
depths of the forest alone. Having found a favourable
spot, a place where four roads meet is
that, if possible, generally chosen, he
hangs the unfortunate duck by the leg to the branch
of a neighbouring tree, which, as if divining the
part that he is intended to play in the piece, flaps
his wings, and begins to cry and quack most vehemently.
Extraordinary as it may appear, it
is well known that the cries of the duck and the goose
are those most readily heard by a wolf, and consequently
it is by no means a rare occurrence to see one of these
animals arrive. An unweaned lamb, which is always
bleating for its mother, is also an excellent decoy-bait
to attract them.
In the months of May and June, when
the sportsman happens to tumble upon a she-wolf, the
cubs of which are suckling, a drag may be run with
one of them; the mother will for certain follow the
track, and, if you are not properly on your guard,
and well prepared to receive her, it is equally certain
she will play you a very unpleasant trick, and make
you feel that it is not wise to excite the maternal
tenderness of a wild animal. But it is in winter
that the wolves are more especially dangerous, and
it is in this rough season that war to the knife is
declared against them. The peasants, as well the
wood-cutters and charcoal-burners of the forest, having
then no employment, assemble in small bands, furnish
themselves with provisions for several days, and armed
with ponderous and clumsy fowling-pieces, go in search
of the wild cat and the wolf, the roebuck and the
boar.
On these occasions, as in all those
where fire-arms are used, the chapter of accidents
is seldom without a page relating some sad history.
Two young men of the village of Akin, near Vezelay,
one of whom was engaged to the sister of his companion,
having made their arrangements, set out to hunt together
in this manner, trusting that a heavy bag might pay
for the expenses of the wedding fête. As luck
would have it, they soon fell upon the traces of a
boar, and separating at the entrance of a dark ravine,
to beat for and watch the animal, were lost to view.
But a short time had elapsed when the young man who
was about to be married observing, though not clearly,
between the trees and bushes a large black mass, which
moved to and fro, and which he imagined was the boar
listening, brought his gun to his shoulder, and, firing,
lodged two iron slugs in the body of his comrade,
who, advancing towards him, his shoulders being covered
with a black sheepskin, had stooped down for a few
seconds to tie the strings of his leggings, or his
shoes.
When the trees are devoid of foliage
and the snow covers the ground, when the forest is
melancholy and cold, and the wolves famished with
hunger, a rather original mode of taking them by night
is adopted. A few days previously to the one
appointed for the purpose, a large glade in the very
thickest part of the forest having been selected, a
carpenter and his assistant, with a well-furnished
bag of tools, start for the spot. There, choosing
some suitable trees, or branches of young pollards,
they cut down a sufficient number, place them in the
ground so as to form a hut of twelve yards square,
leaving between each tree an interval of about four
inches; strengthening the edifice by beams at the
base, and boards nailed transversely seven feet from
the ground.
This open hut thus prepared, and which,
at fifty paces distance, ought not, if well constructed,
to be distinguishable from the trees, is left open
to the inspection of the beasts of the forest for several
nights in succession, in order that they, always suspicious
of the most trifling circumstance, may get accustomed
to it. Two or three ducks, a goose, and sometimes
a sheep, are fastened during these nights near the
hut, with a view of alluring the wolves and inducing
them to visit the mansion.
The day, or rather the appointed evening,
having arrived (a star or moonlight night being selected),
the assembled huntsmen, and a long line of servants,
betake themselves to the forest, leading by the head
four calves, and carrying with them a cask of cold
meat, a hamper of wine, a box of cigars, and a horse-load
of pale cogniac a few camels and
dromedaries added to this cavalcade, and one would
have a complete picture of a tribe of Bedouins preparing
to pass the Great Desert. Arrived in the forest
about nightfall, and well and duly shut up in their
Gibraltar of wood, the sportsmen may eat, drink, and
smoke, and converse in an undertone; but a heavy fine
is invariably inflicted on those who make the least
noise. No one is permitted to sneeze, talk loud,
or laugh; as to blowing one’s nasal organ vigorously,
the thing is absolutely forbidden; no one is allowed
to have a cold, much less an influenza, for at least
eight hours, and every sportsman is careful that the
wine and the viands take each their proper line of
road; if either should unfortunately diverge, the
gentleman must choke rather than cough as
to the servants, they do every thing by gesture and
signal; and woe betide the John that speaks chance
may be, his tongue is thrown to the wolves.
When night has set in, the four calves
are led out from the stockade and fastened to strong
posts which have been fixed in front of each face of
the hut. Silence now reigns supreme, and the wolves, the
spur of famine in their insides, mad in short with
hunger, begin to sniff the breeze and run
their noses over the rank dewy grass of the underwood.
At this point of my narrative I must bespeak the forbearance
of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals,
and beg them to read on to the end, and weigh well
the question and the result, before they bring an
action against me for what follows. The calves
in question having been placed, they each must
I write it? receive an incision in the neck,
the effect of which is that the blood flows slowly,
and they bleat without ceasing; such is
the custom, as it is said, with butchers to make veal
white and pleasing to the eye of the epicure; a really
inhuman habit but when the deed is done
with a view to the extermination of wolves, I think
there is little doubt but Mr. Martin himself would
have used a fleam in the cause.
This operation over, the sportsmen
divide, post themselves, with their guns ready, on
each side of the hut, and wait with beating hearts
the arrival of the expected four-footed visitors.
Nine o’clock passes ten, half-past not
a sound is heard in the forest; the sportsmen who look
out on the snowy scene around them observe nothing;
all without is dreary silence, broken at intervals
by the poor ruminating creatures in front, the cry
of a solitary owl, the fall of some dead branch which
age and the tempest has separated from the giant oak,
the sudden spring of the squirrel awakened by the
noise, and, in the interior of the cabin, by the soft
gurgling of the ruby wine escaping joyfully from its
glass prison-house, to cheer the heart of the impatient
chasseur and who knows better than
he how to empty a flask of genuine Burgundy?
We will, therefore, imagine some of
the party enjoying themselves after this fashion;
when suddenly the calves are heard to rise, to bellow
and groan, strain at the ropes with which they are
fastened, and endeavour to escape; every cigar is
at once extinguished, the comic changes to the serious the
wolves are on the scent. A few minutes more, and
black spots are seen dotted about here and there on
the snow; these increase in number and approach, they
are the wolves that observe and listen; the frantic
terror of the calves is redoubled; the black spots
become larger, they advance still nearer, and at length
the animals may clearly be distinguished. The
wolves imagine the calves have come astray. What
a charming thing if they could carry them off to the
dark ravines they inhabit! The great square hut,
silent as Harpocrates, and the smell of man, make
them hesitate; but a hunger of many days (and we know
that man, the image of his Maker, will eat man, his
fellow, in his extremity) and the smell of blood prevail
and overcome their fears. Four or five wolves
rush forward, and endeavour to remove the calves; the
attempt is vain, the ropes are strong, and so are the
posts to which the animals are fastened: unable,
therefore, to succeed, and stretched across their
dying victims, they plunge their ravenous jaws into
the palpitating flesh, forget their alarm in so delicious
a supper, and eat and drink to their heart’s
content. The rest of the pack thus encouraged,
and afraid of being too late, now advance at a gallop
to share in the repast.
It is then, and amid the yells, the
disputes, and the bloody encounters occasioned by
a division of the spoil, that the sportsmen open their
fire. The first volley puts the wolves to flight,
and they retire to a short distance. But again
all is silent, they soon return to the carcases they
cannot make up their minds to desert; other wolves
also, that have been in the rear, attracted by the
cries and smell of their wounded companions, and the
blood of the calves, arrive and take part in the strife,
so that during several hours the forest echoes with
repeated volleys. At length the calves are fairly
eaten up, when the fortunate survivors of the fray,
gorged and satiated, take to flight, and disappear
like a band of black demons into the recesses of the
forest. It is then the sportsmen leave their
hut, stretch their limbs, count the dead, dispatch
their wounded enemies, and, clothed in thick fur cloaks,
sit as if at the bivouac round a large fire, passing
the remaining hours of the night in emptying more
bottles, excavating more pies, drinking more punch,
and telling better stories than those which I have
had the pleasure of laying before the reader.
The morning has scarcely dawned and
the party is on the road home, when a crowd of peasants
arrive with their dogs, who, following the bloody
traces of the wolves in the snow, dispatch those which,
though wounded, have been able to leave the spot for
the sight of a dead wolf is to a Morvinian as delightful
as the possession of one is profitable. Having
killed his ferocious enemy, the peasant cuts off his
head and his four feet, which he fastens crosswise
at the end of his staff; then arraying himself in
his best and most showy clothes, his hat ornamented
with flowers and ribbons streaming in the breeze,
like those in the cap of an English recruit, he is
off, the left foot foremost, to the mayor of his parish
to receive the reward offered by the government.
But his road to his worship is anything but direct;
he performs what he terms the grand tour, visits every
village in his way, makes his bow to the women, calls
at the sheep-farms and the chateaux, showing,
with no little pride and exultation, his wolf’s
head, and receives at each some acknowledgment for
the service he has rendered the community, money,
a dozen of eggs, a pound of lard, a bit of pork, bread,
flour, flax, or salt, &c. He who kills the wolf,
and carries the spoils as a trophy in this manner,
is accompanied by the musician of the neighbourhood,
who marches before him blowing his bagpipe with the
force of an ox; behind him is one of the strongest
men of the village, with a large bag on each shoulder,
who carries the presents, and imitates the cry and
yells of a wolf when the piper is tired. It will
not therefore be considered astonishing if it is always
with renewed pleasure that a peasant of Le Morvan kills
a wolf; and though one becomes tired, blaze
with almost everything in this mortal world, it is
not the case when a gallant fellow is seen entering
a village carrying the head of this hideous monster
on his pole. This trophy, with tongue distended
and mouth kept wide open by a piece of wood to show
his long yellow teeth, frightens all the little children
that see it.
There are many other methods of taking
the wolf, with a hook, a net, with tame she-wolves
a la loge, the poacher’s method, in pits,
and in a washing-tub by the side of a pond, &c.
But a description of these several modes would occupy
too much space. I cannot, however, before taking
a final leave of this subject, resist the temptation
to relate one last and most fearful incident a
frightful illustration of the horrors to which a country
infested by this animal is liable. It happened
during my sojourn at St. Hibaut, at a farm in that
neighbourhood.
It was in the month of February, the
winter was exceedingly severe, and three feet of snow
still covered the mountains; all communication between
the villages had ceased, and bands of hungry wolves
besieged the farms in the heart of the woods.
The forest of La Madeleine, particularly
full of ravines and dark thickets, small hamlets,
and solitary houses, was overrun with these insatiable
and remorseless brutes. Travellers had been devoured
in the passes of La Goulotte, and mangled
and torn in the ravines of Lingou. No one dared
venture into the country when night approached.
The farm of which I am about to speak
stands just on the borders of the forest of La Madeleine,
in the midst of pastures and patches of furze; it
was full of cattle and sheep, and by the time the stars
were brilliantly illuminating the dark arch of heaven,
was frequently surrounded by troops of wolves, scratching
under the walls, and loudly demanding the trifling
alms of a horse, an ox, or a man. It so happened
that at this time one of the farmer’s colts died,
and he determined, if possible, to use it as a bait,
which would provide him the opportunity of destroying
some of his nocturnal visitors.
For this purpose he placed the dead
body in the middle of his court-yard, and having fastened
weights to its neck and legs, to prevent the wolves
from dragging it away, he set the principal gate open,
but so arranged with cords and pulleys that it could
be closed at any required moment. Night came
on; the house was shut up, the candles extinguished,
the stables barricaded, the dogs brought in-doors and
muzzled to prevent them from barking, and, in the
bright starlight, on some clean straw, the better
to attract attention, lay the dead body of the colt the
gate, as we have said, being open. All was ready,
all within on the watch, when about ten o’clock
the wolves were heard in the distance; they approached,
smelt, looked, listened, grumbled, and distrusting
the open gate, paused; not one would enter. Profound
was the silence and excitement in the house.
Hunger at last overcame prudence and mistrust.
Their savage cries were renewed; they became more and
more impatient and exasperated, how was
it possible to resist a piece of young horseflesh?
The most forward, probably the captain of the band,
could hold out no longer, and to show his fellows
he was worthy to be their leader, he advanced alone,
passed the Rubicon, went up to the colt, tore away
a large piece of his chest, and, proud of his achievement,
set off at speed with his booty between his teeth.
The other wolves, seeing him escape in safety, regained
their confidence, and one, two, three, six, eight
wolves were soon gathered round the animal, but, though
eating as fast as they could, they remained with ears
erect, and each eye still on the gate.
Eight wolves! The farmer thought
it a respectable number, and whistled, when the four
men at the ropes hauling instantly, the large folding-gates
rolled to, and closed in the stillness with the noise
of thunder, the wolves were prisoners.
Startled and terrified at finding themselves caught,
they at once deserted the small remains of the colt,
creeping about in all directions in search of some
outlet by which they might escape, or some hole to
hide in, while the farmer, having secured them, sent
his household to bed, putting off their destruction
till sunrise.
The morning dawned, and with the first
rays of light master and men, for whom the event was
a perfect fête, set some ladders against the
walls of the court, and from them, as well as the
windows, fired volleys on the entrapped wolves.
Unable to resist, the animals for some time hurried
hither and thither, crouching in every nook and corner
of the yard: but the wounds from balls which
reached them behind the stones, or under the carts,
soon turned their fear into rage. They began to
make alarming leaps, and the most dreadful yells.
The work of destruction went on but slowly; the
men were but indifferent shots, the wolves never an
instant at rest; and the rapidity and perseverance
with which they continued to gallop round, or leap
from side to side of the yard, as if in a cage, essentially
baffled the endeavours of their enemies.
The affair was in this way becoming
tedious, when an unlooked-for misfortune threw a dreadful
gloom over the whole scene.
The ladder used by one of the party
being too short, the young man placed himself on the
wall, as if in a saddle, to have a better opportunity
of taking aim; when one of the wolves, the largest,
strongest, and most exasperated, suddenly bounded at
the wall, as if to clear it, but failed; subsequently
the animal attempted to climb up by means of the unhewn
stones, like a cat, and though he again failed, reached
high enough almost to seize with his sharp teeth the
foot of the unfortunate lad. Terrified at this
he raised his leg to avoid the brute lost
his balance and the same moment fell with
a heart-rending scream into the court below.
Each and all the wolves turned like lightning on their
helpless, hopeless victim, and a cry of horror was
heard on every side.
The storm of leaden hail ceased:
no man dared fire again, and yet something must be
done, for the monsters were devouring their unhappy
fellow-servant. Listening only to the dictates
of courage and humanity, the noble-hearted farmer,
gun in hand, leaped at once into the yard, and his
men all followed his heroic example. A general
and frightful conflict ensued. The scene which
then took place defies every attempt at description.
No pen could adequately place before the reader the
awful incidents that succeeded. He must, if he
can, imagine the howling of the wolves, the piteous
cries of the lacerated and dying youth, the imprecations
of the men, the neighing of the horses and roaring
of the bulls in the stables; and, more than all, the
crying and lamentations of the women and children
in the house a fearful chorus such
as happily few, very few persons were ever doomed
to hear. At last the farmer’s wife, a powerful
and resolute woman, with great presence of mind unmuzzled
the dogs, and threw them from a window into the yard.
This most useful reinforcement with their vigorous
attacks and loud barking completed the tumult and
the tragedy. In twenty minutes the eight wolves
were dead, and with them half the faithful dogs.
The poor unfortunate lad, his throat torn open, was
dead; his courageous, though unsuccessful defenders,
were all more or less wounded, and the gallant farmer’s
left hand so injured, that as soon as surgical assistance
could be procured for him, amputation was found to
be necessary.
The monsters, stretched side by side
in the yard, were also stone dead, every one of them;
but not a voice on the farm raised the heart-stirring
shout of victory. Consternation and gloom reigned
over it, and it was long indeed ere the voice of mourning
deserted its walls.
The skin of the wolf is strong and
durable; the woodmen, braconniers, and mountaineers,
make cloaks and caps of it, the tail being left on
the latter to fall over the ear by way of ornament;
they likewise cover with it the outside of their game-bags.
They tan it also, and excellent shoes are made of
the leather, soft and light for summer wear, it
is likewise made into parchment, not to write the
history of their ancestors upon, but to cover small
drums, the rattle of which, on fairdays and fêtes
is sure to set the peasants dancing. This fact
is alluded to in a song of our province, written by
a shepherd-poet, in the pleasing dialect of Le Morvan,
of which the following is a free translation:
Hark! ’tis the wolf-skin drum,
We
come! We come!
Yes, come with
me sweet girl, and fair
As rosebud wild
that scents the air.
The heavens are bright, the stars are
shining,
Thy lovely form my arms entwining;
Together let us
lead the dance
Deep in thy sylvan
haunts, dear France!
Hark! I hear those sounds again,
The wolf-skin drum, the pipers’
strain.
Wealthy persons use a wolf-skin for
a carriage-rug, and in the rainy season as a mat at
the door of a room. “There is nothing good
in the wolf,” says Buffon, “he has a base
low look a savage aspect, a terrible voice,
an insupportable smell, a nature brutal and ferocious,
and a body so foul and unclean that no animal or reptile
will touch his flesh. It is only a wolf that
can eat a wolf.” “No animal,”
writes Cuvier, “so richly merits destruction
as the wolf.” With these two funeral orations
on these incarnate fiends of Natural History, I shall
close this chapter, remarking that the anathema bestowed
on them by Buffon is not quite correct, for if wolves
are dangerous, and enemies to the public weal, and
“there is nothing good” in them during
their lives, they, at least, become useful after their
death.