Friday, November 22, 2019
Bram Stoker Essays - Dracula, Golders Green Crematorium, Bram Stoker
  Bram Stoker      Abraham (Bram) Stoker was born November 8, 1847 at 15 The  Crescent, Clontarf, North of Dublin, the third of seven children.  For the first 7 years of his life Stoker was bedridden with a  myriad of childhood diseases which afforded him much time to  reading. By the time he went to college, Stoker had somehow  overcome his childhood maladies and while at Trinity College,  Dublin, the honor student was involved in soccer and was a  marathon running champion. He was also involved in various  literary and dramatic activities, a precursor to his later  interests in the theater and his involvement with the rising  action Henry Irving, whose performance he had critiqued as a  student at Trinity. After graduation from college, and in his  father's footsteps, he became a civil servant, holding the  position of junior clerk in the Dublin Castle.    His literary career began as early as 1871 and in that year he  took up a post as the unpaid drama critic for the "Evening Mail,"  while at the same time writing short stories. His first literary  "success" came a year later when, in 1872, The London Society  published his short story "The Crystal Cup." As early as 1875  Stoker's unique brand of fiction had come to the forefront. In a  four part serial called the "Chain of Destiny," were themes that  would become Stoker's trademark: horror mixed with romance,  nightmares and curses. Stoker encountered Henry Irving again,  this time in the role of Hamlet, 10 years after Stoker's Trinity  days. Stoker, still very much the critic (and still holding his  civil service position), gave Irving's performance a favorable  review. Impressed with Stoker's review, Irving invited Stoker  back stage and the resultant friendship lasted until Irving's  death in 1905. The Stoker/Irving partnership solidified around  the year 1878. During this time Henry Irving had taken over his  own theater company called the London Lyceum, but he didn't like  the management, and therefore approached Stoker to handle  business, at which point Stoker gave up his government job and  became the acting manager of the theater. A short time after  Stoker began his new career, the publishing house of Sampson,  Lowe contacted him expressing interest in a collection of  Stoker's stories.    "Under the Sunset" was published in 1891 and was well received by  some of the critics, but others thought the book too terrifying  for children. Stoker was already fascinated with the notion of  the "boundaries of life and death" (Leatherdale, p.63) which made  this book too terrifying for children at least in some of the  reviewer's minds. By the time Stoker had received favorable  reviews for his romance novel "The Snake's Pass" (1890), he was  already making notes for a novel with a vampire theme, and by  1894 he was back to macabre themes. It seemed only a natural  consequence that "Dracula" would follow and was published in June  1897.    Reviews on "Dracula" were mixed, and the book never yielded much  money for Stoker. In a favorable review the "Daily Mail" compared  it with "Frankenstein" and Poe's "The Fall of the House of  Usher." "The Bookman" found it likeable in spots but commented  that the "descriptions were hideous and repulsive." (Leatherdale,  p.68)    For the next few years after "Dracula's" publication, events took  a downward spiral for both Irving and Stoker. There were troubles  with Irving's establishment and a fire destroyed part of the  theater (including some important scenery) and Irving eventually  sold it. Stoker did manage however to publish "The Jewel of the 7  Stars" in 1903, and it was a novel based on the information given  to Stoker by an Egyptologist. In 1905 Henry Irving died, leaving  the aging Stoker without a steady jot for the first time in his  life. A year after Irving's death Stoker wrote "Personal  Reminiscences of Henry Irving." Stoker managed to write other  novels after this point until the time of his death in 1912 at  the age of 64.    
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