A FEW MORE WORDS ABOUT GHOSTS, VAMPIRES, AND LOUP-GAROUX
In the winter of 1758, the sacristan of Polliac expired, after a few
hours' illness, of a fright produced by the sight of a large white
rabbit seated on the grave-stone of a famous poacher recently deceased,
as he was crossing the church-yard at midnight after accompanying the
curate to administer the last sacrament to a dying parishioner. The
mind of this poor fellow, who was a proficient in the ghost stories of
the neighbourhood, was probably deeply impressed by the melancholy
scene he had been witnessing; which, combined with the desperate
character and blasphemous habits of Blaise Rolland, the poacher,
induced him to suppose that the soul of the defunct had undergone
transformation, or that Satan himself was watching over his grave, in
the shape of one of the animals he had so often appropriated to himself.
The rabbit proved in the sequel to be a tame one
escaped from a neighbouring farm. But in the interim, the poor man had
fallen a victim to his panic! A more rational being would have inquired
of himself for what purpose the Almighty could be supposed to suffer
the soul of an obscure poacher to revisit the earth, when we learn from
divine writ His refusal to permit the appearance of Dives to his
brethren, as a superfluous concession. "If they hear not Moses and the
Prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the
dead!"
Nothing can be more absurd than the functions
attributed to ghosts, when we know that the soul, at the moment of its
separation from the body, is an impalpable, invisible, substance. Yet
this spiritual essence, which eye hath not seen, or ear heard, is
supposed to have exercised the power of dragging chains, undrawing
curtains, opening doors, ringing bells, uttering groans, articulating
reproaches; in the face of the Scriptural Revelation "that the body
shall return to the dust, and the spirit unto God who gave it!"
We find in St. John's Gospel, that the souls of
mankind in the different mansions of the Almighty, receive after death
the reward of deeds done in the body. Is it likely then that they
should have leisure or inclination for revisiting their dreary mansion
of clay?
There is one instinct which we are bound to
accord to ghosts; i.e. a wonderful aptitude for the discovery of
cowards! In the ghost-stories of all countries, it is observable that
the first impulse of the person addressed by a spectre is to take to
his heels. With the exception of the lady of the Beresford family, who
is said to have sat and talked theology with her brother, there is no
record of a rational conversation between a disembodied spirit and
those of the flesh; for the pretended apparition of Mrs. Veale, is now
known to have been an ingenious bookseller's puff of the work of
Drelincourt on Death.
In most instances, ghost-stories have their
origin in some incident which no one has been at the pains to
investigate. In 1746, the public Theatre of Anatomy, in Paris, was
disturbed by the sudden frenzy of the porter in care of the
dissecting-room; who protested that the spirit of a young man, whose
body had been deposited there the preceding day, after having committed
suicide by throwing himself into the Seine, had appeared to him in the
course of the night, bewailing and lamenting the dreadful consequences
of his crime.
Bruhier, the learned Professor of Anatomy, aware
of the injurious consequences likely to arise from a report that the
theatre was haunted, examined carefully into the details of the case;
when it appeared that this unfortunate young man, having recovered in
the course of the night from the state of insensibility in which he was
deposited in the dissecting-room, and terrified by the horrible aspect
of the spot in which he found himself, among dead bodies, skeletons and
anatomical preparations faintly illuminated by the light of a lamp, had
dragged himself to the door of the small adjoining room inhabited by
the porter, and in faint accents implored his assistance, and described
the agonies of his situation.
The porter, roused from his sleep by the appeal of a dead man wrapped
in his winding-sheet, instantly lost his senses; and the doors being
locked upon them, the exhausted young man, whom Providence had thus
fruitlessly restored, sank a victim to cold and exhaustion. His body
was discovered stretched on the floor of the dissecting-room near the
porter's door. But for the judicious investigations of Monsieur
Bruhier, this would have been established as an authentic instance of
spectral visitation!
A similar circumstance occurred in Lancashire some years ago.
A lady, the wife of a wealthy squire, died after a protracted illness;
and on the evening of her decease, her husband, desirous to pass a
solitary hour by the body, sent the nurse who was watching beside it,
out of the room. Before the expiration of an hour, the bell by which
the deceased had been in the habit of summoning the nurse, rang
violently; and the woman, fancying the unfortunate widower was taken
suddenly ill, hurried into the room. He dismissed her angrily, however,
protesting that he had not rung. Shortly afterwards, the bell was rung
a second time; when the woman observed to one of the servants that she
should not attend to the summons, as the gentleman might again repent
having summoned her, and dismiss her ungraciously.
"It cannot be my master who is ringing now," replied the footman, "for I have this moment left him in the drawing-room."
And while he was still speaking, the bell of the chamber of death rang a third time—and still more violently than before.
The nurse was now literally afraid to obey the
summons: nor was it till several of the servants agreed to accompany
her, that she could command sufficient courage. At length, they
ventured to open the door, expecting to discover, within, some terrible
spectacle.
All, however, was perfectly tranquil; the corpse
extended upon the bed under a holland sheet, which was evidently
undisturbed. Such, however, was the agitation of the poor nurse, that
nothing would induce her to remain alone with the body; and one of the
housemaids accordingly agreed to become her companion in the adjoining
dressing-room.
They had not been there many minutes, when the
bell again sounded; nor could there be any mistake on the subject, for
the bell-wire passing round the dressing-room was in motion, and the
servants in the offices could attest the vibration of the bell. The
family butler accordingly determined to support the courage of the
terrified women by accompanying them back to the dressing-room, in
which they were to sit with the door open, so as to command a view of
the bed.
These precautions effectually unravelled the
mystery! A string had been attached to the bell-pull to enable the sick
lady to summon her attendants without changing her position, which,
still unremoved, hung down upon the floor; and a favourite kitten,
often admitted into the room to amuse the invalid, having entered the
chamber unobserved, was playing with the string, which, being entangled
in her feet, had produced this general panic.
But for the opportune explanation of this
trivial incident, the family mansion would have obtained the notoriety
of a haunted house, and probably been deserted!
Such was the case with the Crown Inn at Antwerp,
where some years ago, a white spectre, bearing a lamp in one hand and a
bunch of keys in the other, was seen by a variety of travellers passing
along a corridor till it disappeared in a particular chamber.
Nothing would satisfy the neighbours that an
unfortunate traveller had not been, at some period or other, despatched
in that fatal room by one of the previous landlords of the house; and
the Crown gradually obtained the name of the Haunted Inn, and ceased to
be frequented by its old patrons.
The landlord, finding himself on the brink of
ruin, determined to sleep in the haunted-room with a view of proving
the groundlessness of the story; and caused his ostler to bear him
company, on pretence of requiring a witness to the absurdity of the
report; but in reality, from cowardice. At dead of night, however, just
as the two men were composing themselves to sleep in one bed, leaving
another which was in the room untenanted, the door flew open, and in
glided the white spectre!
Without pausing to ascertain what it might
attempt on approaching the other bed, towards which it directed its
course, the two men rushed naked out of the room; and by the alarm they
created, confirmed, more fully than ever, the evil repute of the house.
Unable longer to sustain the cost of so
unproductive an establishment, the poor landlord advertised for sale
the house in which he and his father before him were born and bred. But
bidders were as scarce as customers; the inn remaining on sale for
nearly a year, during which, from time to time, the spectre reappeared.
At length, an officer of the garrison, who had
formerly frequented the house, and recollected the excellent quality of
its wine, moved to compassion in favour of the poor host, undertook to
clear up the mystery by sleeping in the haunted chamber; nothing
doubting that the whole was a trick of some envious neighbour, desirous
of deteriorating the value of the freehold in order to become a
purchaser.
His offer having been gratefully accepted, the
Captain took up his quarters in the fatal room, with a bottle of wine,
and a brace of loaded pistols on the table before him; determined to
shoot at whatever object might enter the doors.
At the usual hour of midnight, accordingly, when
the door flew open and the white spectre bearing a lamp and a bunch of
keys made its appearance, he seized his weapons of destruction; when,
lo! as his finger was on the point of touching the trigger, what was
his panic on perceiving that the apparition was no other than the
daughter of his host, a young and pretty girl, evidently walking in her
sleep! Preserving the strictest silence, he watched her set down the
lamp, place her keys carefully on the chimney-piece, and retire to the
opposite bed, which, as it afterwards proved, she had often occupied
during the life-time of her late mother who slept in the room.
No sooner had she thoroughly composed herself,
than the officer, after locking the door of the room, went in search of
her father and several competent witnesses; including the water-bailiff
of the district, who had been one of the loudest in circulating rumours
concerning the Haunted Inn. The poor girl was found quietly asleep in
bed; and her terror on waking in the dreaded chamber, afforded
sufficient evidence to all present of the state of somnambulism in
which she had been entranced.
From that period, the spectre was seen no more;
probably because the landlord's daughter removed shortly afterwards to
a home of her own.
It has frequently occurred, for ill-disposed
persons to profit by the ill-name of a haunted house, as in the case of
gangs of coiners and thieves, who raise such reports in order to secure
impunity in their haunts. The Palace of the Tuileries is said to be
haunted by a Red Man, who regularly appears on the eve of any popular
tumult, betiding evil to the Royal Family of France. And appear he
will, to the end of time; for those who wish to create a political
panic, take care that the apparition shall be periodically renewed. The
Palace at Berlin was at one time in danger of having a Weisse Frau, or
White Lady, to match with the Red Man.
During the reign of Frederick I., one of the
Princesses, his daughters, being dangerously ill, a white spectre was
seen to traverse the royal corridor leading to her apartments; and from
that moment, the royal family gave up all hope of her recovery. The
following night, the Princess expired; and not a soul about the Court
doubted that the fatal event had been announced by the appearance of
the White Lady, who, on being challenged by the guard at the head of
the staircase had flitted past like a shadow. Great difficulty was
found in procuring proper attendants to watch beside the body of her
royal highness; when one of the royal Chaplains requested a sight of
the depositions of the soldiers by whom the spectre had been accosted.
The mystery was instantly explained. A favourite
attendant of the late Princess, who, from the moment of her death had
been confined to her bed by severe affliction, happened to have
mentioned to the Chaplain that, on quitting her royal highness's room
in search of him, about midnight, the night preceding her mistress's
demise, having a white veil thrown over her head to keep her from the
night air, she had been challenged by the sentinel on guard; which
being contrary to etiquette in a spot where her person was well known,
she had not thought proper to reply. On further investigation, the
evidence of the young lady herself was obtained; when it appeared that
the period of her passage in a white night-dress, to and from the
Princess's apartments, corresponded exactly with the apparitions of the
White Lady described by the soldiers a happy relief for those who were
compelled to inhabit that wing of the palace.
A curious discovery occurred some years ago, at
the head-quarters of the French army on the banks of the Rhine. It
appears that rumours became suddenly prevalent of the repeated
appearance of the spectre of the famous General Marceau, who, was
killed at Altenkirchen near Coblentz, in 1796, and buried in the glacis
of that city. He was, nevertheless, seen in his uniform as a General of
Chasseurs, with a drawn sword in his hand, by several sentries and
patroles; and nothing was discussed in Paris but the nature of the
omens to be inferred from this apparition of one of the bravest
officers of the Republic.
It happened that the French Commandant of the
city of Coblentz was a school-fellow and intimate friend of General
Marceau; and either in hopes of once more beholding one so much
beloved, or with a view of detecting the impostor who had presumed to
trifle with his memory, he marched to the spot pointed out as the usual
haunt of the spectre, escorted by a company of grenadiers.
Shortly after his arrival, the ghost made its
customary appearance, and by way of military salute, the Commandant
ordered his men to "make ready" and "present!" But ere he could add the
fatal word "fire," the ghost was upon its knees, whining piteously;
realizing the officer's shrewd suspicions that it would prove to be one
of the boatmen of the Rhine, who had assumed this appalling costume in
order to pursue his calling unmolested, of conveying by night to the
fortress of Ehrenbreitstein, opposite Coblentz, (at that moment
besieged by the French) the provisions and succours so vital to the
garrison. In the character of Marceau's ghost, accordingly, he had
nightly paraded the glacis; keeping the coast clear from intrusion,
while his boats traversed the river towards the fortress.
Every one who has travelled in Hungary is
familiar with the superstitions of the Willis, or dancing-brides, and
the Vampires, or bodies that preserve a posthumous life by the suction
of blood from human veins. But the latter superstition has found its
way to other countries. A grave having been accidentally opened in a
church-yard in Lorraine, about the year 1726, the body of a
schoolmaster who, in his lifetime, had been strongly suspected of
proficiency in the occult sciences, but who had been dead nearly half a
century, was discovered in his coffin, as plump and fresh as though
still alive; his eyes bright—his air joyous.
The whole village having crowded to the spot to behold the miracle,
instantly recognised a Vampire in this healthful corpse. Thousands of
anecdotes were instantly cited of children lost in the neighbourhood;
who, though previously supposed to have fallen into the river, or been
destroyed by wolves, had evidently satisfied the dreadful appetites of
the dead schoolmaster! In order to keep him, for the future, quiet and
harmless in his grave, the villagers drove a stake through the body,
after having cut off his head and burnt it on the spot.
Had they persevered in their search, they would
doubtless have found reason to fear, from the evidence of the adjoining
graves, that their own fathers and mothers were also Vampires. Many
soils, particularly those impregnated with nitre, have the property of
preserving bodies by converting them to a substance resembling
spermaceti. Similar discoveries have been made in several church-yards
in England; but luckily without provoking suspicions so preposterous.
In the course of a few years, thanks to the
progress of national education, the best authenticated ghost-story
going will scarcely find an auditor. Half of the magic rites and mystic
wonders of the olden time have found able expositors in our own, in the
retort and the crucible. We no longer exorcise a ghost:—we decompose
it—like any other gas.
The orgies of intemperance used to be a fertile
source of apparitions; as in the case of the female spectre which
rebuked the infidelity of Lord Lyttleton—and the appearance of Lord
Lyttleton himself to his friend Miles Peter Andrews; two bon vivants,
who were most likely indebted for their nocturnal visions to an extra
bottle of claret, and a broiled bone.
A clergyman, who had been struggling hard and
sacrificing his nights' rest for a series of months to a new
translation of the Prophecies, took it into his head one night, that
three children had entered his room and were seated at his writing
table. As there was nothing alarming in such a visitation, he continued
to write on; and on retiring to bed, at daybreak, left his young
visitors apparently occupying their place. When he woke in the morning,
they had of course disappeared.
The illusion was, however, so strong, and
recurred so often, that his studies were seriously interrupted; till at
last he took the only wise step ever taken by an inveterate
ghost-seer:—he consulted an eminent physician.
"You have been overworking yourself," was the
judicious reply, "and unless you have recourse to air and exercise,
your nervous system will become seriously impaired. Such cases are by
no means rare among men of studious habits. In some instances, the
spectrum is created by a disorder of the optic nerve. In yours, I am
pretty nearly sure that it arises from derangement of the stomach. A
good dose of calomel, my dear Sir, will lay all your ghosts in the Red
Sea!"
An ignominious conclusion of a romance, which in
some respects resembles the story of the Lutheran clergyman related in
Wraxall's Memoirs! who, on taking possession of his cure, was awoke
early next morning by the spectre of a pastor in his gown and band,
praying beside the desk at the foot of his bed, and holding a ghastly
child by either hand, whom he recognised—by a likeness suspended in the
parish church—as his predecessor in the living. This occurred in summer
time; but at the beginning of winter, when the stove in his chamber
came to be lighted, as it never used to be in the time of the former
pastor, an unpleasant smell issuing from the chimney caused a search to
be instituted; when lo! the bones of two young children were found
among the ashes in the stove. The incumbent, who had already circulated
the report of his ghost story, had of course the comfort of finding
child-murder attributed to his predecessor.
The instance of Eugene Aram and ‘Dan Clarke's
bones' affords strong proof that those who hide can find; and in the
ease in question, there appears some doubt whether the spectre were the
delinquent.
The subject of ghosts, however, must not be
treated with less reverence than its due. Samuel and the Witch of
Endor, and the declaration of the Evangelist that, during the Passion
of our Saviour "the dead were raised up, and seen by many in the City
of Jerusalem," remind us that spectral visitations are consistent with
the records of Holy Writ. But in this case, as in that of demoniacal
possession, the Christian era has produced a revolution in the
pschycological phenomena of nature; the power of the evil one over the
human race being modified so that the dead are no longer raised up;
while the angels of the Lord no longer manifest themselves to the eyes
of mankind, nor do His fallen angels take possession of the living soul.
A remarkable story connected with the belief in
spectral visitations, is that of the celebrated Bernhardi of Vienna;
who after spending the evening in a gay carouse with a party of young
men of infidel principles, where he boldly avowed his disbelief in the
existence of ghosts, undertook to proceed, as the bell tolled midnight,
to an adjoining church-yard, and stick into a grave pointed out to him,
a fork which was taken from the supper-table and presented to him for
the purpose.
A considerable wager was to depend upon his
execution of the feat; and at the appointed hour, with a daring
deportment Bernhardi quitted the company, and repaired to the scene of
action. It was agreed that he should return to the supper-table,
leaving the fork sticking in the grave so as to be found on the morrow,
in token of his accomplishment of the exploit.
Ten minutes would have sufficed for his visit to
the church-yard. But at the close of an hour he was still absent; when
his companions became convinced that he had turned coward and sneaked
home to bed. They instantly determined to convict his defection by
following him to his lodgings; but on their arrival, found, with no
small consternation, that he had not made his appearance.
One of them, more his friend than the rest,
really alarmed for his safety, proposed that they should visit the
church-yard, and ascertain, at least, whether he had accomplished the
feat. When lo! extended on the grave lay the lifeless body of the
scoffer; who had burst a blood-vessel and died of fright. Having accidentally pinned down his cloak to the
earth in sticking the fork into the ground, where it still remained, he
probably fancied himself transfixed by the hands of the grisly tenant
of the grave he was thus unpardonably violating, for the sport of a
drunken frolic; and thus became the victim of his unwarrantable
sacrilege. Let those who jest upon such fearful matters, take warning
by Bernhardi!
Another superstition connected with the
disembodied spirit, is the belief that spectres are to be found in the
neighbourhood of hidden treasures.
In barbarous countries, it was the practice to
kill a slave on a spot where treasures were deposited, in order that
his soul might watch over the hoard, and terrify others from the spoil.
In Ireland, such murders would be gratuitous;
for almost every spot pointed out as having been a depository of
treasures, in the olden time, is said to be haunted by a banshee.
The same superstition appears to prevail in Germany and the Low Countries.
Some years ago, a most ridiculous incident, founded upon this prejudice, came before the inquisition of the Saxon tribunals.
The Burgomaster of the village of Brummersdorf,
being a man of dissolute propensities, was in the habit of frequenting
the public-house of the place, in order to enjoy with loose companions
the irregularities he dared not attempt in his own house, in the fear
of drawing upon himself the reprehension of his superiors in office. A
fellow of the name of Osterwald, who acted as his clerk, was usually
the companion of these excesses; and many a good bottle of wine formed
the cement of the excellent understanding between them.
One summer night, as they were seated, according
to custom, in the public room of the inn, considerably the worse for a
carouse prolonged after the decent inhabitants of the village had
retired to rest, a stranger entered the inn demanding a night's
lodging; and having approached the table at which the Burgomaster and
his friend were drinking, continued to attract their attention by
uttering profound sighs.
Provoked by the interruption, the Burgomaster,
whose name was Listenbach, demanded the cause of his affliction; to
which the fellow replied that it was one with which he did not choose
to trouble two gentlemen so distinguished as those he saw before him.
Tickled by this flattery, Osterwald insisted on
an explanation; and, at length, after much show of caution and mystery,
the stranger declared that being a poor student of the University of
Jena, he had been warned by a dream to repair to the old Castle of
Brummersdorf; where he would find a fertile source of prosperity for
his old age.
"I knew not," said the stranger, "that there
existed such a spot as Brummersdorf on the face of the globe; but on
consulting my books of science, the following morning, I discovered,
not only that it possessed the ruins of an ancient castle, formerly one
of the finest in Westphalia, but that the constellations were
favourable to the enterprize."
"I recommend you then to set off at daybreak for
the Castle," said Osterwald, "which is situated only a few hundred
yards' distance, on the cliff overhanging the village."
"Alas! I have just returned from thence!"
replied the stranger. "I was expressly enjoined in my dream to visit
the spot at the full of the moon."
"And what success have you met with, my good friend?" demanded Listenbach, with increasing curiosity.
"I need not tell you gentlemen, since you appear
to be inhabitants of the place," replied the stranger, "that the old
Castle of Brummersdorf is the depository of a prodigious treasure, the
property of the extinct house of that name."
"Indeed!" exclaimed his astonished auditors.
"That accounts for the edict issued by Government that the inhabitants
should on no account be permitted to disturb a stone of that ancient
monument!"
"On arriving at the spot," rejoined the
stranger, "I made known in a loud voice the spiritual authority by
which my mission was appointed. When lo! the spirit to whom is
delegated the guardianship of the hidden treasure replied that he was
not permitted to divulge the spot where it was buried, unless adjured
by three persons at once; and unless the vault containing it were
opened by a magic key—to be formed of pure gold. But alas! however
tempting the prospect, gentlemen, how is a poor devil like myself to
procure the twenty-one ducats which the spirit asserts to be
indispensable for the casting of the key; or the attendance of two
enterprizing companions willing to share my exploit, and its noble
reward?"
"Your two companions are before you," exclaimed
the boozy Burgomaster, "if you will accept our company. Let me see what
money I have in my purse!"
Even without paying the reckoning—including a
fresh bottle of wine, called for to drink to the success of their
expedition—the purse of the Burgomaster did not furnish half the
necessary sum. Nothing was easier for him, however, than to despatch
his clerk to the strong box of his office; which, as he was obliging
enough to acquaint them, contained nearly a couple of hundred ducats.
In as short a time as the condition of his
intellects would allow, Osterwald returned with the requisite sum; and
the three companions, after an inspiriting bumper, took their way
towards the ruins of the old castle.
Having arrived on a platform before the venerable gateway, distinctly
visible by the brilliant light of the moon, the stranger drew from his
pocket a short black stick, with which he traced upon the parched turf
a small circle, adorning it with several mystical devices and symbols.
"Within this magic circle," said he, addressing
his companions who were overcome, partly by wine and partly by awe,
"you must place yourselves, in order to be secure from the molestation
of the evil spirits besetting the spot; while I proceed to fulfil the
conditions of the guardian spirit of the eastern tower."
The two drunkards, not a little pleased to be thus secured from an
interview so tremendous, readily complied; and having furnished the
stranger with the purse, took up their position within the circle. For
some time, intense anxiety kept them silent. At length, they ventured
to communicate to each other their opinion, that the interview between
the strange student and the Spirit of the Castle was somewhat long; but
being fortified by their position within the magic circle, weary of
standing, and oppressed by drowsiness, they agreed to stretch their
limbs on the ground.
Next morning, the village of Brummersdorf was disturbed by the
discovery that in the course of the night the office of the Burgomaster
had been broken into, and its strong box pillaged, the iron safe being
left empty on the floor. A further search was immediately instituted;
but no Burgomaster was to be found; and his clerk being also absent,
the dissolute character of Listenbach and Osterwald caused them to fall
under suspicion of having embezzled and carried off the public funds.
The testimony of the village landlord, however,
soon induced other surmises; and the constables, by whom the robbery
was discovered, having proceeded at the head of a body of peasants to
the ruins of the old Castle, the hapless Burgomaster and his drunken
clerk were discovered stretched on the ground:—not, as was in the first
instance apprehended, bathed in their gore, but quietly sleeping off
the fumes of their carouse!
The loss of his money was succeeded, of course, by the loss of the
place for which he had shown himself so incompetent. But in the course
of the summer, the cunning impostor was arrested; and it was the
evidence of the parties themselves on his trial which gave publicity to
the story!
An amusing anecdote occurs in the
Memoirs of the President de Thou; whose son, also a lawyer of eminence,
having been despatched by Government in 1596 to the town of Saumur, on
a mission of consequence, was desired to take up his quarters in the
ancient Hôtel-de-Ville, the seat of Government.
Having retired to bed with the uneasy feelings
usually attendant on sleeping in a strange place, particularly one of
so gloomy and solitary an aspect, the President was awoke about
midnight by the weight of some heavy burthen suddenly flung upon his
chest; and entertained little doubt that an attempt was about to be
made upon his life. Being a man of strength and courage, he seized the
object in his arms, and flung it violently on the floor; when, by the
heavy moans that ensued, he perceived it to be a human being.
"Doubtless some thief," was his next reflection, "who was searching under my bolster during my slumbers for my watch and purse."
While the President was preparing to jump out of
bed, the figure, which was attired in white, rose feebly from the
floor, and by the dim light of the moon, assumed a somewhat spectral
appearance.
"Who are you?" cried the President, "answer this moment, or I will fell you to the earth!"
"Who am I, ignoramus? Who should I be but the
Queen of Heaven!" replied a cracked female voice; while the servant of
the President, who slept in an adjoining room, being now disturbed,
rushed in with lights; and with the aid of the porter of the
Hôtel-de-Ville discovered the intruder to be a poor maniac,
accustomed to wander about the streets of Saumur and find shelter where
she could.
Perceiving the doorway of the private apartments of the
Hôtel-de-Ville to be open, the poor woman had profited by so
unusual a circumstance to secure the best bed-room. On Monsieur de
Thou's return to Paris, the King, who insisted on hearing from his own
lips his ridiculous adventure, complimented him on his presence of
mind; admitting that, for his own part, he stood more in fear of ghosts
than of the shot of the enemy.
Had the servants of Monsieur de Thou encountered
this midnight visitant instead of their master, it is probable that the
town of Saumur would have enjoyed the reputation of having a haunted
Hôtel-de-Ville as long as one stone remained upon another.
The forest of Ratenau, in Westphalia, passed, during a whole year, for
being haunted by white spectres of the gnome or imp description; who
having accosted, not only the peasants of the neighbourhood, but some
of the servants of the Count returning after nightfall from the
neighbouring market, the road through the forest came to be deserted,
and the greatest consternation prevailed at the Schloss von Ratenau.
"On my arriving at the Castle from Berlin to spend the summer," said
the Count, in relating the story, "I found the poor people firmly
persuaded that a supernatural race of beings had attained supreme power
over a portion of my estate; and it was vain to attempt to argue them
into a more rational frame of mind. Judge, however, of my surprise,
when, on returning through the forest, a few nights after my arrival,
from the house of one of my neighbours, the carriage stopped suddenly,
the horses reared violently; and the postillion, instead of attempting
to keep his saddle, began roaring aloud, ‘The Spirits—The Evil Spirits!'
"Another minute and the carriage was dashed from the road and
overturned in a ravine; nor was it without much difficulty that I
extricated myself, the postillion having already taken to his heels
accompanied his fellow servants. I confess to you, that, half stunned
by the accident, I experienced some uneasiness at the idea of finding
myself alone, at midnight, with the object which had produced this
fearful consternation, whether robber or impostor; nay, I will not
swear that some of the fantastic tales of Schiller and Goethe did not
recur to my mind.
"Great, therefore, was my satisfaction on emerging from the broken
vehicle, and perceiving two white shapes bounding and gambolling at a
distance among the hoary trunks of the oak trees, to recognize two
handsome white grey-hounds, which I afterwards ascertained to have
strayed from the kennel of the Prince Henry of Prussia, and to have
subsisted for a year on their depredations in the forest of Ratenau!"
Another adventure occurred on the estate of a
nobleman of the same family, in the Duchy of Brunswick. An attempt was
made to rob the village church; the sacramental plate and poor-box
being found one morning in the nave of the church wrapped in a piece of
old sacking, so as to give rise to an opinion that the thieves must
have been disturbed in their sacrilegious enterprize. Some time
afterwards, a gang of burglars having been arrested, the judge of the
neighbouring town charged them, after their conviction of divers other
robberies, with being accessory to the crime in question.
In a moment, these fellows, who had preserved
the most hardened audacity, fell on their knees, and freely confessed
the attempt; adding, that they had been prevented carrying off their
booty by the sudden appearance of the evil one emerging from the
vestry; and as far as the uncertain light of their dark lantern in that
vast area enabled them to judge, in the form of a horned monster.
A general laugh instantly arose in court; several of the inhabitants of
the village in question recognizing by this description, a tame stag,
the pet of a former incumbent of the living, which was allowed the run
of the presbytery orchard and church-yard; and which, having most
opportunely sought shelter in the porch on the night in question, had
probably followed the robbers into the church, which they entered by
means of false keys, leaving the doors open for their readier escape.
It is recorded in the Memoirs of one of the free-thinking circle which
surrounded Baron d'Holbach, in Paris, previous to the Revolution, that
having retired to bed one night after a gay supper, during which this
coterie of sceptics amused themselves with the most blasphemous
conversation, his gay companions, in order to try his courage,
introduced into his bed-room a goat, whose fleece had been steeped in
spirits of wine; which, when set on fire, gave to the unlucky animal an
aspect truly horrific.
The goat almost equally terrified with its intended victim, instantly
ran to the bed and attempted to extinguish the flames by rubbing itself
against the bed-clothes, which it set on fire; and the young man,
having drunk freely at supper so as to be heavily asleep was with
difficulty extricated from the flames. The goat died of the
consequences of this cruel experiment; and the young man was subject
for the remainder of his life to epileptic fits.
Many instances are on record of an equally
serious termination to these foolish practical jokes. Witness the
well-known story of the young lady, who, after boasting of her
intrepidity, had a skeleton from a neighbouring surgery brought into
her bed-room by her brothers and some young friends staying in her
father's house. On retiring to rest, these cruel jesters listened
anxiously for the shrieks which they hoped would betray her cowardice,
and were greatly disappointed to find her as self-possessed as she had
announced; for instead of screaming, she went quietly to bed. But alas!
next morning, when the servant entered her room, she was found playing
with the skeleton, in a state of complete fatuity!—
In the southern provinces of France, there prevails a superstition,
derived probably from the lycanthropy of the ancients, that certain
persons assume at night the form of wolves, and roam the country for
prey, under the name of loup-garoux; a fable which gave rise to
Perrault's charming fairy-tale of Little Red Riding Hood.
In a neighbourhood said to be frequented by one of these devastators,
who was of course no other than a man in wolf's clothing, who, in this
assumed character pillaged the adjacent farms, a garde champêtre
or country constable, who had been several times attacked by the
supposed monster, contrived to lop off his paw with a hatchet; and, on
the escape of the loup-garou, found, as he expected, that the furry paw
contained a human hand!
All the labourers of the neighbourhood were accordingly visited by the
gendarmes to ascertain, by his mutilation, the identity of the
sheep-stealer. But the delinquent had already fled the country; and the
imputed cause of his flight was confirmed a few years afterwards, by
his re-appearance in another department of France, maimed of his left
hand!
Sometimes, these loup-garoux are madmen, whose insanity has taken this
monomaniacal form; as in the instance of the vintager near Padua, in
the sixteenth century, who was apprehended on a charge of furiously
biting his neighbours on pretence of his lycanthropic propensities.
When reminded that his face was unchanged, while the real loup-garoux
have always a wolfish physiognony, he asserted that he was permitted to
wear his wolf-skin inwards; whereupon the barbarous village tribunal by
which he was tried, ordered his hands to be amputated and skinned, to
ascertain the truth of the assertion!
Inflammation ensued, and the wretched lunatic died of his wounds!—