"Picou tells me that he saw the were-wolf only this day se’nnight," said a peasant; "he was down by the hedge of his buckwheat field, and the sun had set, and he was thinking of coming home,
when he heard a rustle on the far side of the hedge. He looked over, and there stood the wolf as big as a calf against the horizon, its tongue out, and its eyes glaring like marsh-fires. Mon
Dieu! catch me going over the marais to-night. Why, what could two men do if they were attacked by that wolf-fiend?""It is tempting Providence," said one of the elders of the village;" no man
must expect the help of God if he throws himself wilfully in the way of danger