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The Curse of the Wer.. - Site de Thomas - Free

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NOTES<br />

66. For example, John Graham Dalyell, <strong>The</strong> Darker Superstitions <strong>of</strong> Scotland,<br />

Illustrated from History and Practice (Edinburgh, 1834); George Webbe<br />

Dasent, Popular Tales from <strong>the</strong> Norse (London: George Routledge &<br />

Sons, 1859); Walter K. Kelly, Curiousities <strong>of</strong> Indo-European Tradition<br />

and Folk-lore (London: Chapman & Hall, 1863).<br />

67. <strong>The</strong> article drew from <strong>the</strong> following works, among o<strong>the</strong>rs: Henry Fanshawe<br />

Tozer, Researches into <strong>the</strong> Highlands <strong>of</strong> Turkey (London: John Murray,<br />

1869); W.R.S. Ralston, <strong>The</strong> Songs <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Russian People: As Illustrative<br />

<strong>of</strong> Slavonic Mythology and Russian Social Life (London: Ellis & Green,<br />

1872); John T. Naake, Slavonic Fairy Tales; Collected and Translated<br />

from <strong>the</strong> Russian, Polish, Servian and Bohemian (London: Henry S. King,<br />

1874).<br />

68. See Gilbert Campbell, ‘<strong>The</strong> White Wolf <strong>of</strong> Kostopchin’, in G. Campbell,<br />

Wild and Weird: Tales <strong>of</strong> Imagination and Mystery (London: Ward & Lock,<br />

1889), reprinted in Brian J. Frost (ed.), <strong>The</strong> Book <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Wer</strong>ewolf (London:<br />

Sphere, 1973), pp. 75–106; Fred Whishaw, ‘<strong>The</strong> <strong>Wer</strong>ewolf’, Temple Bar<br />

126 (November 1902), pp. 568–79; Clemence Housman, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Wer</strong>e-Wolf<br />

(London: John Lane/Chicago: Way & Williams, 1896), originally published<br />

in Atalanta (1895), reprinted in Otten (ed.), A Lycanthropy Rea<strong>de</strong>r, pp.<br />

286–320; Rudyard Kipling, ‘<strong>The</strong> Mark <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Beast’, Pioneer (12 & 14<br />

July 1890), reprinted in R. Kipling, Life’s Handicap: Being Stories <strong>of</strong><br />

Mine Own People (1891) (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1987), pp. 195–207;<br />

E<strong>de</strong>n Phillpotts, ‘Loup-Garou!’, in E. Phillpotts, Loup-Garou! (London:<br />

Sands, 1899), pp. 1–34; Mary Hartwell Ca<strong>the</strong>rwood, ‘<strong>The</strong> Beauport Loup-<br />

Garou’, Atlantic Monthly 72 (November 1893), pp. 630–38; H. Beaugrand,<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> <strong>Wer</strong>wolves’, Century Magazine, vol. 56, no. 6 (October 1898), pp.<br />

814–23.<br />

69. Emily Gerard, <strong>The</strong> Land Beyond <strong>the</strong> Forest: Facts, Figures, and Fancies<br />

from Transylvania (Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood, 1888),<br />

p. 322.<br />

70. See Su<strong>the</strong>rland Menzies, ‘Hugues, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Wer</strong>-Wolf: A Kentish Legend <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Middle Ages’, Court Magazine and Monthly Critic 13 (1838), pp. 259–74,<br />

reprinted in Frost (ed.), Book <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Wer</strong>ewolf, pp. 53–73; Crowe, ‘A Story<br />

<strong>of</strong> a Weir-Wolf’, pp. 184–9; Forster, <strong>The</strong> Weirwolf; Greene, Bound by<br />

a Spell; Lilian Moubrey and Walter Herries Pollock, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Wer</strong>ewolf: A<br />

Romantic Play in One Act (London: William Heinemann, 1898); Phillpotts,<br />

‘Loup-Garou!’, pp. 1–34; Whishaw, ‘<strong>The</strong> <strong>Wer</strong>e-Wolf’, pp. 568–79.<br />

71. Dorson, <strong>The</strong> British Folklorists, p. 162.<br />

72. Max Müller, Lectures on <strong>the</strong> Science <strong>of</strong> Language, Delivered at <strong>the</strong> Royal<br />

Institution <strong>of</strong> Great Britain in February, March, April, and May, 1863,<br />

Second Series (New York, 1869), p. 371, quoted in ibid., p. 163.<br />

73. Dorson, <strong>The</strong> British Folklorists, p. 181.<br />

157

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