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- Newsgroups: alt.horror
- Path: sparky!uunet!uunet.ca!rose!usenet
- From: david.vaughan@rose.com (david vaughan)
- Subject: question garding Drac
- Organization: Rose Media Inc, Toronto, Ontario.
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 02:00:47 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.020049.29605@rose.com>
- Sender: usenet@rose.com (Usenet Gateway)
- X-Gated-By: Usenet <==> RoseMail Gateway (v1.70)
- Lines: 56
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-
- Date Entered: 11-21-92 20:56
- S >From: slfrp@cc.usu.edu
- S >According to every vampire story I've read, and movie I've seen,
- the sun will
- S >do serious harm to a vampire. Now, I admit I've not had time to read the
- S >book "Dracula," but after seeing the movie, I have a question about a quote
- S >from the FFC version.
- S >
- S >At one point, just before we see Dracula chasing after Minna, Van Helsing's
- S >voice tells us that, "contrary to popular belief, vampires CAN move about
- S >in the daytime, though it is not their natural time, and their powers
- S >are weak."
- S >
- S >What gives? Did I miss something, or am I just totally clueless?
- S >
- S >Many thanks,
- S >
- S >Eric Michaelis
- S >slfrp@mua.usu.edu
- S >
-
- Coppola got it right. In most vampire stories prior to this century,
- the vampires could go abroad in daylight, and not burn, age, or
- otherwise suffer. They were, however, unable to shapeshift, fly, etc.
- in daylight. This is true in Stoker's Dracula, and Le Fanu's Carmilla
- (my personal favourite), and, I think, in Polidori's short story "The
- Vampyre". One article I read during the lead-up to FFC's Dracula
- suggested that the original Nosferatu (1922, silent by F.W. Murnau)
- may have been the first to show a vampire being killed by sunlight,
- instead of merely weakened. The idea became fixed in popular culture
- by the Hammer Dracula series and Rice's novels. Chelsea Quinn Yarbro,
- in her Saint-Germain series, suggests that vampires are able to
- venture abroad in daylight by lining their shoes with their native
- earth. Of course, her vampires are heavily humanized, and are barely
- recognizable as such at times. Other contemporary writers have
- suggested that sunlight is a kind of allergy, or that vampires, like
- other night-dwellers, are merely hypersensitive to light (I think that
- Lumley used this approach in the Necroscope series). Thus, the death
- by sunlight is hardly canonical to the vampire genre, and may, indeed,
- be a relatively new addition.
-
- Incidently, while it's been a while since I did any reading on the
- folklore of vampires, I seem to recall that in folklore the vampires
- just naturally had to return to their coffins by day, just as ghosts,
- werewolves, and other evil supernatural beings had to return to their
- places of rest.
-
- Hope this clears things up.
-
- David Vaughan
- Hamilton, Ont., Canada
- david.vaughan@rose.com
- ---
- RR 1.60 P002365: I never drink ... wine. -- Dracula
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