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- Path: sparky!uunet!sun-barr!cs.utexas.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!uicvm.uic.edu!u16244
- Organization: University of Illinois at Chicago
- Date: Tuesday, 17 Nov 1992 09:55:07 CST
- From: <U16244@uicvm.uic.edu>
- Message-ID: <92322.095507U16244@uicvm.uic.edu>
- Newsgroups: alt.vampyres
- Subject: Re: Species of vampires
- References: <92321.132115U16244@uicvm.uic.edu> <caw1k8g@rpi.edu>
- Lines: 56
-
- In article <caw1k8g@rpi.edu>, jordag@cary108.its.rpi.edu (Lord of the Vampyres)
- says:
- >
- >one more thing on Anne Rice species that you forgot to mention...
- > incediblely fast...ie running so fast that mortal dont realize Lestat just
- >ran by...
-
- Hell, if I were to list every single power of every specie of Vampire that I
- knew of, the listing would have been a hell of a lot longer than 60 lines,
- and I had to be rushing to class when I sent it. As it is, I forgot to list
- wallcrawling, animal and canine control, heightened reflexes, incredibly
- sensitive senses of smell and vision (they are nocturnal creatures), and so
- on and so on. Hell, the life support systems alone (ability to breathe without
- air, and resistance to all diseases and poisons) are common enough to most
- species that all things considered, Vampires are no pushovers (duh!), and
- Peter Cushing's Van Helsing either must have been bionically enhanced, or
- paid a huge bribe to the script writer to survive his wrestling matches
- with my favorite Dracula (Christopher Lee).
-
- Still haven't received any word on the Saberhagenians yet. But I have
- speculated on the origins of the Stoker Dracula.
-
- The term Dracula means Son of the Dragon. In ancient mythology, the further
- you go east, the more vastly powered the species of Dragons become. Indeed,
- Dragons seemed to be enormous parts of the cultures of the Eurasian continent,
- and perhaps even North America (remember the Thunderbird?). Also, as we go
- to look at the Eastern Dragons (who mythologically might have extended to
- the area of Europe that would have been where Tepes was doing his greatest
- fighting with the Eastern Turks), they had some abilities in common with
- some of the vampires of old. They could become invisible, change between
- human, animal and dragon form, had command of the beasts and elements, could
- mesmerize humans... starting to see a bit of a pattern?
-
- Mythological hypothesis: Tepes, or perhaps some relative, or even an
- invading Turk or a Mongol among the Turks, engaged in a battle with a rogue,
- predatory Eastern Dragon, in a battle that was so intense, that both sides
- shed blood, and it mixed. The blood infected the surviving human (he sure
- as hell wasn't alone), and mutated him dramatically, giving his mortal frame
- the power of the dragon he had killed. But because of his mortal frame,
- while invulnerable to most of the metal weapons of the day, or the dark twisted
- nature of the "hero" (the battle was so intense that he became psychotic),
- he became predatory himself, developing such an innate fear of light that his
- own powers would kill him in the light of day, an insanity which would go on
- and continue to effect others, even though they didn't bear the same insanity,
- merely a curse of the Dragon's blood being passed on.
-
- It is just a half-assed idea, but considering the Rice-Vampires are the result
- of a conflict with a poltergeist with similar results, can my explanation be
- all the more strange?
-
- Douglas P. Wojtowicz.
-
- Before I take off, perhaps also, the dragon was a species with its own
- weaknesses to sunlight, (perhaps not so lethal as a vampire, but still
- losing enough power in the light for a single man to slay it in single
- combat).
-