Soul that is dead ere life
be sped,
Body that’s
body of Beast,
With brain of a man to dare
and to plan,
So make I ready
my Feast!
With tooth and claw and grip
of jaw
I rip and tear
and slay,
With senses that hear the
winds ere they stir,
I roam to the
dawn of day.
Soul that must languish in
endless anguish,
Thy life is a
little spell,
So take thy fill, ere the
Pow’rs of Ill
Shall drag Thee,
Soul, to Hell.
The Song of
the Loup Garou.
If you ask that excellent body of
savants the Society for Psychical Research,
for an opinion on the subject, they will tell you that
the belief in ghosts, magic, witchcraft, and the like
having existed in all ages, and in every land, is
in itself a fact sufficient to warrant a faith in
these things, and to establish a strong probability
of their reality. It is not for me, or such as
I am, to question the opinion of these wise men of
the West, but if ghosts, and phantoms, and witchcraft
and hag-ridings are to be accepted on such grounds,
I must be allowed to put in a plea, for similar reasons,
in favour of the Loup Garou, the Were-Tiger,
and all their gruesome family. Wherever there
are wild beasts to prey upon the sons of men, there
also is found the belief that the worst and most rapacious
of the man-eaters are themselves human beings, who
have been driven to temporarily assume the form of
an animal, by the aid of the Black Art, in order to
satisfy their overpowering lust for blood. This
belief, which seeks to account for the extraordinary
rapacity of an animal by tracing its origin to a human
being, would seem to be based upon an extremely cynical
appreciation of the blood-thirsty character of our
race. The white man and the brown, the yellow
and the black, independently, and without receiving
the idea from one another, have all found the same
explanation for the like phenomena, all apparently
recognising the truth of the Malay proverb, that we
are like unto the toman fish that preys upon
its own kind. This general opinion, which seems
the more worthy of acceptance in that it is the reverse
of flattering to the very races that have formed this
curious estimate of their own unlovely character, might
by the ignorant and vulgar be supposed to be the real
basis of the belief of which I speak, were it not
for that dictum of the Society for Psychical Research
to which I have above referred. But bowing to
this authority, we must accept the Loup Garou
and all its kith and kin as stern realities, and not
attribute it, as we might perhaps have been inclined
to do, to a deadly fear of wild beasts, coupled to
a thorough knowledge of the unpleasant qualities of
primitive human nature.
Educated Europeans, who live in a
land where even Nature, when she can be seen for the
houses, has had man’s hall-mark scarred deep
into her face, are apt to think that the Age of Superstition
has gone to fill the lumber-room of the past.
Occasionally they are awakened from this belief by
the torturing of a witch in a cabin by an Irish-bog;
but even an event so near home as that is powerless
to altogether disabuse their minds of their preconceived
opinion. The difficulty really is, that they
cannot get completely rid of the notion that the world
is peopled by educated Europeans like themselves,
and by a few other unimportant persons, who do not
matter. They know that, numerically, they are
as but a drop in the ocean of mankind, but it is possible
to know a thing very thoroughly and to realise it
not at all. Thus they come by their false opinion;
for, in truth, the Age of Superstition lives as lustily
to-day, as when, in past years, witches blazed at
Smithfield, or died with rending gulps and bursting
lungs, lashed fast to an English ducking stool.
In the remote portions of the Malay
Peninsula we live in the Middle Ages, with all the
appropriate accessories of the dark centuries.
Magic and evil spirits, witchcraft and sorcery, spells
and love-potions, charms and incantations are, to
the mind of the native, as real and as much a matter
of everyday life as are the miracle of the growing
rice, and the mysteries of the reproduction of species.
This must be not only known but realised, not only
accepted as a theory, but acknowledged as a fact,
if the native view of life is to be understood and
appreciated. Tales of the marvellous and the
supernatural excite interest and fear in a Malay audience,
but they occasion no surprise. Malays know that
strange things have happened in the past, and are daily
occurring to them and to their fellows. Some
are struck by lightning, while others go unscathed;
and similarly some have strange experiences, which
are not wholly of this world, while others live and
die untouched by the supernatural. The two cases,
to the Malay mind, are completely parallel; and though
both furnish matter for discussion, and excite fear
and awe, neither are unheard of phenomena calculated
to awaken wonder and surprise.
Thus the existence of the Malayan
Loup Garou to the native mind is a fact
and not a mere belief. The Malay knows
that it is true. Evidence, if it be needed, may
be had in plenty; the evidence, too, of sober-minded
men, whose words, in a Court of Justice, would bring
conviction to the mind of the most obstinate jurymen,
and be more than sufficient to hang the most innocent
of prisoners. The Malays know well how Haji Abdallah,
the native of the little state of Korinchi in Sumatra,
was caught naked in a tiger trap, and thereafter purchased
his liberty at the price of the buffaloes he had slain,
while he marauded in the likeness of a beast.
They know of the countless Korinchi men who have vomited
feathers, after feasting upon fowls, when for the nonce
they had assumed the forms of tigers; and of those
other men of the same race who have left their garments
and their trading packs in thickets, whence presently
a tiger has emerged. All these things the Malays
know have happened, and are happening to-day, in the
land in which they live, and with these plain evidences
before their eyes, the empty assurances of the enlightened
European that Were-Tigers do not, and never did exist,
excite derision not unmingled with contempt.
The Slim Valley lies across the hills
which divide Pahang from Perak. It is peopled
by Malays of various races. Rawas and Menangkabaus
from Sumatra, men with high-sounding titles and vain
boasts, wherewith to carry off their squalid, dirty
poverty; Perak men from the fair Kinta valley, prospecting
for tin, or trading skilfully; fugitives from Pahang,
long settled in the district; and the sweepings of
Sumatra, Java, and the Peninsula. It was in this
place that I heard the following story of a Were-Tiger,
from Penghulu Mat Saleh, who was, and perhaps is still,
the Headman of this miscellaneous crew.
Into the Slim Valley, some years ago,
there came a Korinchi trader named Haji Ali, and his
two sons, Abdulrahman and Abas. They came, as
is the manner of their people, laden with heavy packs
of sarongs, the native skirts or
waist-cloths, trudging in single file through
the forests and through the villages, hawking their
goods to the natives of the place, with much cunning
haggling or hard bargaining. But though they came
to trade, they stayed long after the contents of their
packs had been disposed of, for Haji Ali took a fancy
to the place. Therefore he presently purchased
a compound, and with his two sons set to work upon
planting cocoa nuts, and cultivating a rice-swamp.
They were quiet, well-behaved people; they were regular
in their attendance at the mosque for the Friday congregational
prayers, and as they were wealthy and prosperous they
found favour in the eyes of their poorer neighbours.
Thus it happened that when Haji Ali let it be known
that he desired to find a wife, there was a bustle
in the villages among the parents with marriageable
daughters, and, though he was a man well past middle
life, Haji Ali found a wide range of choice offered
to him.
The girl he selected was Patimah,
the daughter of poor parents, peasants living on their
land in one of the neighbouring villages. She
was a comely maiden, plump and round, and light of
colour, with a merry face to cheer, and willing fingers
wherewith to serve a husband. The wedding portion
was paid, a feast proportionate to Haji Ali’s
wealth was held to celebrate the occasion, and the
bride was carried off, after a decent interval, to
her husband’s home among the fruit groves and
the palm-trees. This was not the general custom
of the land, for among Malays the husband usually
shares his father-in-law’s house for a long
period after his marriage. But Haji Ali had a
fine new house of his own, brave with wattled walls
stained cunningly in black and white, and with a luxuriant
covering of thatch. Moreover, he had taken the
daughter of a poor man to wife, and could dictate
his own terms to her and to her parents. The
girl went willingly enough, for she was exchanging
poverty for wealth, a miserable hovel for a handsome
home, and parents who knew exactly how to get out
of her the last fraction of work of which she was
capable, for a husband who seemed ever kind, generous,
and indulgent. None the less, three days later
she was found beating on the door of her parents’
house, at the hour when dawn was breaking, trembling
in every limb, with her hair disordered, her garments
drenched with dew from the brushwood through which
she had forced her way, with her eyes wild with horror,
and mad with a great fear. Her story the
first act in the drama of the Were-Tiger of Slim ran
in this wise, though I shall not attempt to reproduce
the words or the manner in which she told it, brokenly,
with shuddering sobs, to her awe-stricken parents.
She had gone home with Haji Ali to
the house where he dwelt with his two sons, Abdulrahman
and Abas, and all had treated her kindly and with
courtesy. The first day she cooked the rice ill,
but though the young men grumbled, Haji Ali said never
a word of blame, when she had expected blows, such
as would have fallen to the lot of most wives under
similar circumstances. She had no complaint to
make of her husband’s kindness, but none the
less she had fled his dwelling, and her parents might
’hang her on high, sell her in a far land, scorch
her with the sun’s rays, immerse her in water,
burn her with fire,’ but never again would she
return to one who hunted by night as a Were-Tiger.
Every evening after the Isa Haji
Ali had left the house on one pretext or another,
and had not returned until an hour before the dawn.
Twice she had not been aware of his return until she
found him lying on the sleeping-mat by her side; but,
on the third evening, she had remained awake until
a noise without told her that her husband was at hand.
Then she had hastened to unbar the door, which she
had fastened after Abas and Abdulrahman had fallen
asleep. The moon was behind a cloud, and the
light she cast was dim, but Patimah saw clearly enough
the sight which had driven her mad with terror.
On the topmost rung of the ladder,
which in this, as in all Malay houses, led from the
ground to the threshold of the door, there rested
the head of a full-grown tiger. Patimah could
see the bold, black stripes which marked his hide,
the bristling wires of whisker, the long cruel teeth,
and the fierce green light in the beast’s eyes.
A round pad, with long curved claws partially concealed,
lay on the ladder rung, one on each side of the monster’s
head, and the lower portion of its body reaching to
the ground was so foreshortened that to the girl it
looked like the body of a man. Patimah gazed at
the tiger, from the distance of only a foot or two,
for she was too paralysed with fear to move or cry
out, and as she looked a gradual transformation took
place in the creature at her feet. Slowly, as
one sees a ripple of wind pass over the surface of
still water, the tiger’s features palpitated
and were changed, until the horrified girl saw the
face of her husband come up through that of the beast,
much as the face of a diver comes up to the surface
of a pool. In another moment Patimah saw that
it was Haji Ali who was ascending the ladder of his
house, and the spell that had hitherto bound her was
snapped. The first use she made of her regained
power of motion was to leap through the doorway past
her husband, and to plunge into the jungle which edged
the compound.
Malays do not love to travel singly
through the jungle even when the sun is high, and
under ordinary circumstances no woman could by any
means be prevailed upon to do such a thing. But
Patimah was wild with fear of what she had left behind
her, and though she was alone, though the moonlight
was dim, and the dawn had not yet come, she preferred
the dismal depths of the forest to the home of her
Were-Tiger husband. Thus she pushed her way through
the underwood, tearing her garments and her flesh
with thorns, catching her feet in creepers and trailing
vines, stumbling over unseen logs, and drenching herself
to the skin with the dew from the leaves and grasses
against which she brushed. A little before daybreak
she made her way, as I have described, to her father’s
house, there to tell the tale of her strange adventure.
The story of what had occurred was
speedily noised through the villages, and the parents
with marriageable daughters, who had been disappointed
by Haji Ali’s choice of a wife, rejoiced exceedingly,
and did not forget to tell Patimah’s papa and
mamma that they had always anticipated something of
the sort. Haji Ali made no effort to regain possession
of his wife, and his neighbours drawing a natural
inference from his actions, avoided him and his sons
until they were forced to live in almost complete
isolation.
But the drama of the Were-Tiger of
Slim was to have a final act.
One night a fine young water-buffalo,
the property of the Headman, Penghulu Mat Saleh, was
killed by a tiger, and its owner, saying no word to
any man upon the subject, constructed a cunningly arranged
spring-gun over the carcase. The trigger-lines
were so set that should the tiger return to finish
the meal, which he had begun by tearing a couple of
hurried mouthfuls from the rump of his kill, he must
infallibly be wounded or slain by the bolts and slugs
with which the gun was charged.
Next night a loud report, breaking
in clanging echoes through the stillness, an hour
or two before the dawn was due, apprised Penghulu Mat
Saleh that some animal had fouled the trigger-lines.
In all probability it was the tiger, and if he was
wounded he would not be a pleasant creature to meet
on a dark night. Accordingly Penghulu Mat Saleh
lay still until morning.
In a Malay village all are astir very
shortly after daybreak. As soon as it is light
enough to see to walk the doors of the houses open
one by one, and the people of the village come forth
singly huddled to the chin in their sarongs
or bed coverlets. Each man makes his way down
to the river to perform his morning ablutions, or
stands on the bank of the stream, staring sleepily
at nothing in particular, a black figure silhouetted
against the broad ruddiness of a Malayan dawn.
Presently the women of the village come out of the
houses, in little knots of three or four, with the
children pattering at their heels. They carry
clusters of gourds in either hand, for it is their
duty to fill them from the running stream with the
water which will be needed during the day. It
is not until the sun begins to rise, when morning
ablutions have been carefully performed, and the first
sleepiness of the waking hour has departed from heavy
eyes, that the people of the village begin to set
about the avocations of the day.
Penghulu Mat Saleh arose that morning
and performed his usual daily routine before he collected
a party of Malays to aid him in his search for the
wounded tiger. He had no difficulty in finding
men who were willing to share the excitement of the
adventure, and presently he set off with a ragged
following of near a dozen at his heels, the party
having two guns and many spears and kris.
They reached the spot where the spring-gun had been
set, and they found that beyond a doubt the tiger
had returned to his kill. The tracks left by the
great pads were fresh, and the tearing up of the earth
on one side of the dead buffalo, in a spot where the
grass was thickly flecked with blood, showed that
the shot had taken effect.
Penghulu Mat Saleh and his people
then set down steadily to follow the trail of the
wounded tiger. This was an easy matter, for the
beast had gone heavily on three legs, the off-hind
leg dragging uselessly. In places, too, a clot
of blood showed red among the dew-drenched leaves
and grasses. None the less the Penghulu and his
party followed slowly and with caution. They
knew that a wounded tiger is never in a mood in which
a child may play with him, and also that, even when
he has only three legs with which to spring upon his
enemies, he can on occasion arrange for a large escort
of human beings to accompany him into the land of
shadows.
The trail led through the brushwood,
in which the dead buffalo lay, and thence into a belt
of jungle which edged the river bank a few hundred
yards above Penghulu Mat Saleh’s village, and
extended up-stream to Kuala Chin Lama, a distance
of half a dozen miles. The tiger turned up-stream
when this jungle was reached, and half a mile higher
up he came out upon a slender wood-path.
When Penghulu Mat Saleh had followed
thus far, he halted and looked at his people.
‘Know ye whither this track
leads, my brothers?’ he asked in a whisper.
The men nodded, but said never a word.
A glance at them would have shown you that they were
anxious and uneasy.
‘What say ye?’ continued
the Penghulu. ‘Do we still follow this trail?’
‘It is as thou wilt, O Penghulu,’
said the oldest man of the party, answering for his
fellows, ‘we follow thee whithersoever thou goest.’
‘It is well!’ said the
Penghulu. ‘Come let us go.’ No
more was said, when this whispered colloquy was ended,
and the party set down to the trail again silently
and with redoubled caution.
The narrow track, which the wounded
tiger had followed, led on towards the river bank,
and presently the high wattled bamboo fence of a native
compound became visible through the trees. Penghulu
Mat Saleh pointed at it. ‘Behold!’
was all he said. Then the party moved on again,
still following the tracks of the tiger, and the flecks
of red blood on the grass. These led them to
the gate of the compound, and through it to the ’laman
or open space before the house. Here they were
lost at a spot where the rank spear-blades of the lalang
grass had been beaten down by the falling of some
heavy body. A veritable pool of blood marked
the place. To it the trail of the limping tiger
led. Away from it there was no tracks, save those
of the human beings who come and go through the rank
growths which cloak the earth in a Malay compound.
‘Behold!’ said Penghulu Mat Saleh once
more. ’Come, let us ascend into the house.’
And so saying he led the way up the stair-ladder of
the dwelling where Haji Ali lived with his two sons
Abas and Abdulrahman, and whence a month or two before
Patimah had fled during the night-time with a deadly
fear in her eyes, and the tale of a strange experience
faltering on her lips.
Penghulu Mat Saleh and his people
found Abas sitting cross-legged in the outer apartment
preparing a quid of betel-nut with elaborate care.
The visitors squatted on the mats, and the usual customary
salutations over, Penghulu Mat Saleh said:
’I have come in order that I
may see thy father. Is he within the house?’
‘He is,’ said Abas laconically.
‘Then make known to him that I would have speech
with him.’
‘My father is sick,’ said
Abas in a surly tone, and at the word a tremor of
excitement ran through Penghulu Mat Saleh’s followers.
‘What is that patch of blood
in the lalang before the house?’ asked
the Penghulu conversationally, after a short pause.
‘We slew a goat yesternight,’ replied
Abas.
‘Hast thou the skin, O Abas?’
asked the Penghulu, ’for I am renewing the faces
of my drums, and would fain purchase it.’
‘The skin was mangy, and we
cast it into the river,’ said Abas.
‘What ails thy father, Abas?’
asked the Penghulu returning to the charge.
‘He is sick,’ said suddenly
a voice from the curtained doorway, which led to the
inner apartment. It was the elder son Abdulrahman
who spoke. He held a sword in his hand, and his
face wore an ugly look as his words came harshly and
gratingly with the foreign accent of the Korinchi
people. He went on, still standing, near the doorway,
’He is sick, O Penghulu, and the noise of your
words disturbs him. He would slumber and be still.
Descend out of the house, he cannot see thee, Penghulu.
Listen to these my words!’
Abdulrahman’s manner, and the
words he spoke, were at once so rough and defiant
that the Penghulu saw that he must choose between a
scuffle, which would mean bloodshed, and a hasty retreat.
He was a mild old man, and he drew a monthly salary
from the Perak Government. Moreover, he knew
that the white men, who guided the destinies of Perak,
were averse to bloodshed and homicide, even if the
person slain was a wizard, or the son of a wizard.
Therefore he decided upon retreat.
As they clambered down the steps of
the door-ladder, Mat Tahir, one of the Penghulu’s
men, plucked him by the sleeve, and pointed to a spot
beneath the house. Just below the place, in the
inner apartment, where Haji Ali might be supposed
to lie stretched upon the mat of sickness, the ground
was stained a dim red for a space of several inches
in circumference. Malay floors are made of laths
of wood or of bamboo laid parallel to one another,
with spaces between each one of them. This is
convenient, as the whole of the ground beneath the
house can thus be used as a slop-pail, waste-basket,
and rubbish heap. The red stain lying where it
did had the look of blood, blood moreover from some
one within the house, whose wound had very recently
been washed and dressed. It might also have been
the red juice of the betel-nut, but its stains are
but rarely seen in such large patches. Whatever
it may have been the Penghulu and his people had no
opportunity of examining it more closely, for Abdulrahman
and Abas followed them out of the compound, and barred
the door against them.
Then the Penghulu set off to tell
his tale to the District Officer, the white man under
whose charge the Slim Valley had been placed.
He went with many misgivings, for Europeans are sceptical
concerning such tales, and when he returned, more
or less dissatisfied, some five days later, he found
that Haji Ali and his sons had disappeared. They
had fled down river on a dark night, without a soul
being made aware of their intended departure.
They had neither stayed to reap their crops, which
now stood ripening in the fields; to sell their house
and compound, which had been bought with good money, ’dollars
of the whitest,’ as the Malay phrase has it, nor
yet to collect their debts. This is a fact; and
to one who knows the passion for wealth and for property,
which is to be found in the breast of every Sumatran
Malay, it is perhaps the strangest circumstance of
all the weird events, which go to make up the drama
of the Were-Tiger of Slim.
There is, to the European mind, only
one possible explanation. Haji Ali and his sons
had been the victims of foul play. They had been
killed by the simple villagers of Slim, and a cock-and-bull
story trumped up to account for their disappearance.
This is a very good, and withal a very astute explanation,
showing as it does a profound knowledge of human nature,
and I should be more than half inclined to accept it
as the correct one, but for the fact that Haji Ali
and his sons turned up in quite another part of the
Peninsula some months later. They have nothing
out of the way about them to mark them from their fellows,
except that Haji Ali goes lame on his right leg.