Lastly, they have an equivalent to the lycanthropy of the older European nations:- "Among the Garrows a madness exists, which they call transformation into a tiger, from the person who is afflicted with this malady walking about like that animal, shunning all society.
"The Ethnology of the British Colonies and Dependencies"
Robert Gordon Latham
The following tale, in which the lycanthropy is far from being altogether a mere effort of the imagination, appears to be founded upon the belief in the continued existence of this rare species of madness down to our own day-or near it-for the story seems to belong to the year 1832. The English reader will not fail to notice the correspondence between the title and the well-known designation of the illustrious head of the noble house of Grosvenor.
"The Man-Wolf and Other Tales"
Emile Erckmann and Alexandre Chatrian
In connection with this I shall give a sketch of modern folklore relating to lycanthropy.
"The Book of Were-Wolves"
Sabine Baring-Gould