Zweiter Wolfsjunge von Sultanpur
This account of the Second Sultanpur Wolf Boy is an extract from A journey through the Kingdom of Oude.
In all parts of India, the Hindoos have a notion that the family of a man
who kills a wolf, or even wounds it, goes to utter ruin; and so also the village
within the boundaries of which a wolf has been killed or wounded... Some Rajpoot
families in Oude, where so many children
are devoured by wolves, are getting over this
prejudice.
There is now at Sultanpoor a
boy who was found alive in a wolf's den, near Chandour, about ten miles from
Sultanpoor, about two years ago. A
trooper sent by the native governor of the district of Chandour, to demand
payment of some revenue, was passing along the bank of the river near Chandour
about noon, when he saw a large female wolf leave her den, followed by three
whelps and a little boy. The boy went on all fours and seemed to be on the best
possible terms with the old dam and the three whelps, and the mother seemed to
guard all four with equal care. They all went down to the river and drank
without perceiving the trooper, upon his horse watching them. As soon as they
were about to turn back, the trooper pushed on to cut off and secure the boy;
but he ran as fast as the whelps could, and kept up with the old one. The ground
was uneven, and the trooper's horse could not overtake
them.
They all entered the den, and the
trooper assembled some people from Chandour with pick-axes, and dug into the
den. When they had dug in about six or eight feet, the old wolf bolted with her
three whelps and the boy.
The trooper
mounted and pursued, followed by the fleetest young men of the party; and as the
ground over which they had to fly was more even, he headed them and turned the
whelps and the boy back upon the men on foot, who secured the boy and let the
old dam and the three cubs go on their
way.
They took the boy to the village but
had to tie him for he was very restive, and struggled hard to rush into every
hole or den they came near. They tried to make him speak, but could get nothing
from him but an angry growl or snarl. He was kept for several days at the
village, and a large crowd assembled every day to see him. When a grown-up
person came near him, he became alarmed, and tried to steal away; but when a
child came near him, he rushed at it, with a fierce snarl like that of a dog,
and tried to bite it. When any cooked meat was put before him, he rejected it in
disgust; but when any raw meat was offered, he seized it with avidity, put it on
the ground under his paws, like a dog, and ate it with evident pleasure. He
would not let anyone come near him while he was eating, but made no objection to
a dog coming and sharing his food with him. The trooper remained with him four
or five days, and then returned to the governor, leaving the boy in charge of
the Rajah of Hasunpoor. He related all that he had seen, and the boy was soon
after sent to the European officer commanding the First Regiment of Oude Local
Infantry at Sultanpoor, Captain Nicholetts, by order of the Rajah of Hosunpoor,
who was at Chandour, and saw the boy when the trooper first brought him to that
village. This account is taken from the Rajah's own report of what had taken
place.
Captain Nicholetts made him over to
the charge of his servants, who take great care of him, but can never get him to
speak a word. He is very inoffensive except when teased, Captain Nicholetts
says, and will then growl surlily at the person who teases him. He had come to
eat anything that is thrown to him, but always prefers raw flesh, which he
devours most greedily.
He will drank a
whole pitcher of buttermilk when put before him, with I out seeming to draw
breath. He can never be induced to keep on any kind of clothing even in the
coldest weather. A quilt stuffed with cotton was given to him when it became
very cold this season, but he tore it to pieces, and ate a portion of it cotton
and all, with his bread every day. He is very fond of bones, particularly
uncooked ones, which he masticates apparently with as much ease as meat. He has
eaten half a lamb at a time without any apparent effort, and is very fond of
taking up earth and small stones and eating them. His features are coarse, and
his countenance repulsive; and he is very filthy in his habits. He continues to
be fond of dogs and jackals, and all other small four-footed animals that come
near him; and always allows them to feed with him if he happens to be eating
when they approached.
Captain Nicholetts
in letters dated the 14th and 19th of September, 1850, told me that the boy died
in the latter end of August, and that he was never known to laugh or smile. He
understood little of what was said to him, and seemed to take no notice of what
was going on around him.
He formed no
attachment for anyone, nor did he seem to care for
anyone.
He never played with any of the
children around him, or seemed anxious to do so. When not hungry he used to sit
petting and stroking a pareear or vagrant dog, which he used to permit to feed
out of the same dish with him. A short time before his death Captain Nicholetts
shot this dog, as he used to eat the greater part of the food given to the boy,
who seemed in consequence to be getting thin. The boy did not seem to care in
the least for the death of the dog. The parents recognized the boy when he was
just found, Captain Nicholetts believes; but when they found him to be so stupid
and insensible, they left him to subsist upon charity. They have now left
Hasunpoor, and the age of the boy when carried off cannot be ascertained; but he
was to all appearances about nine or ten years of age when found, and he lived
about three years afterwards. He used signs when he wanted anything, and very
few of them except when hungry, and he then pointed to his mouth. When his food
was placed at some distance from him, he would run to it on all fours like any
four-footed animal; but at other times he would Falk upright occasionally. He
shunned human beings of all kinds, and would never willingly remain near one. To
cold, heat, and rain he appeared to be indifferent; and he seemed to care for
nothing but eating. He was very quiet, and required no kind of restraint after
being brought to Captain Nicholetts. He had lived with Captain Nicholetts'
servants about two years, and was never heard to speak till within a few minutes
of his death, when he put his wolf-children hands to his head and said, "It
ached," and asked for water. He drank it and died.
Zweiter Wolfsjunge von Sultanpur
Datum: 1848
Alter: 9
Ort: Sultanpur, India
Jahre in der Wildnis: 3
Tiere: Wölfe
Datum: 1848
Alter: 9
Ort: Sultanpur, India
Jahre in der Wildnis: 3
Tiere: Wölfe
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