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I'm James McComb, reporting live from home in my bathrobe and slippers.Tonight, we're talking Duncan Polar Peppermint Coffee.Jean's here with the latest.Uh, Jean, do you copy?
The home with Duncan is where you want to be.
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Hello, my friends.This is Professor Greg Jackson.And as you know, this is an off week for our bi-weekly podcast, but I thought I'd give you a special Halloween treat.
In our recent Halloween episode, number 168 of History That Doesn't Suck, we uncovered the undead story of the 1922 classic vampire film Nosferatu.
While the movie isn't a scene-for-scene lift from author Bram Stoker's 1897 novel, Dracula, it's close enough that Bram Stoker's widow, Florence, sued the filmmakers for copyright infringement.In that episode, we also explored Dracula.
So today, we thought it'd be fun to introduce a new podcast that tells the whole story of the book that launched an entire genre.Even if you haven't read the book, you know the story.
Bram Stoker's Dracula tells the tale of an ancient vampire who leaves his homeland to terrorize Victorian Britain. The roots of this legendary horror novel stretch far into the distant past, and deep into the human psyche.
What you're about to hear is a new Wondery Plus podcast, The Real History of Dracula, hosted by my dear friend, Lindsey Graham.
The series reveals how author Bram Stoker raided ancient folklore and exploited Victorian fears revolving around sex, science, and religion, and how even today we remain enthralled with strange creatures of the night.I hope you enjoy it.
Jonathan Harker wakes with a start.For a terrifying moment, he thinks he's in a hearse bound for the grave.Then he remembers he's in the Carpathian Mountains on a business trip.It's May, but the night is a cold one.
Sitting in the back of an open carriage, Jonathan is wrapped up with a rug across his lap.And in the seat in front of him, the driver urges four black horses on with his whip.
They bump and rattle up a steep drive and pass beneath the high stone walls of a castle.The carriage comes to an abrupt halt in a broad courtyard.Jonathan peers up at the vast ruined fortress looming above him.
Its broken battlements cut a jagged line across a moonlit sky.No ray of light comes from any of the tall black windows.
But the driver doesn't answer.Instead, he gets down from the carriage and places Jonathan's luggage on the ground.Jonathan looks around.The courtyard is empty.Driver?
But the man has already climbed back into his seat, and the carriage is soon lurching off through a dark archway, leaving Jonathan alone.He waits, wondering if somehow a mistake has been made. His trip from England was a long and uncomfortable one.
By sea to France, train to Budapest, a coach up into the Borgo Pass, and finally the open carriage up into the mountains.The road was wild, and the forests beyond wilder still.
Jonathan saw the glowing eyes of wolves in the darkness, and he heard their chilling cries.Even now, behind the walls of the castle, Jonathan does not feel quite safe. The great doorway to the castle swings open.
A solitary figure clutches an antique silver lamp, its slender light quivering in the darkness.
Welcome to my house.Enter freely and of your own will.
I am Dracula.And I bid you welcome, Mr. Harker.
Jonathan steps across the threshold, and at once, the Count shakes him by the hand with a strength that makes Jonathan wince.
Come freely.Go safely.And leave something of the happiness you bring.Thank you.Come in.The night air is chill, and you must need to eat and rest.Let me take your luggage. Oh, please.You needn't... Nay, sir.You are my guest.
It is late, and my people are not available.Let me see to your comfort, myself.
Follow me. My partner, Mr. Hawkins, sends his best regards, and his apologies that he could not come in person.I have a letter for you from him, actually.He is most excited to meet you when you reach London.
As am I. I have read many tales of your great England, but alas, as yet I only know your tongue through books. You, Mr. Harker, are the first Englishman I have seen in the flesh.Well, sir, I should say you know and speak English thoroughly well.
I am but a little way on the road I would travel.Here.
The count opens the door to a well-lit room.The table is set for supper, and a fire burns in the broad stone hearth.
I trust you will find all you wish. Sup, how you please.You will excuse me that I do not join you.I have already dined.
Jonathan sits as the smell of roast chicken fills his nostrils.He's forgotten how hungry he was.But just as he's about to eat, beyond the castle in the valley below, wolves erupt into full cry.To Jonathan, it is a horrid sound.
But Count Dracula only smiles, his sharp white teeth gleaming in the lamplight.
Listen to them, the children of the night.What music they make.
From Airship, I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is the Real History of Dracula. On May 26, 1897, the British publishing house Archibald Constable & Company released a new book.
Bound in cheap yellow cloth, it was written by a little-known Irish theatre manager living in London.The book was not a financial hit.But Bram Stoker's Dracula would change the world of fiction forever.
Stoker's novel was an elaborate synthesis of folklore, social commentary, and psychological thrills that melded legend with history and modern science with age-old nightmares.
Now, more than 125 years after its publication, Dracula still has a firm grip on our imaginations.
One of the incredible things about Dracula is that not only is it this wonderful snapshot of the 19th century, but it also has so much resonance today.
So I picked up Dracula and thought, you know, this could be a really fun book to teach.And I was stunned at what a treasure chest of themes and tropes were in there.And the book just kept unpacking and exploding and exploding.
It's just an amazing gothic thriller, and people will still enjoy reading it, I think, for a long time to come.
Bram Stoker's Dracula has been adapted into countless films, plays, comics, and radio programs, and every modern vampire story owes a debt to the novel. But how did Bram Stoker's book become such a sensation?
And why do audiences still thrill to tales of the walking undead more than a century later?To write his gruesome story of immortal evil, Stoker drew on intensive research.
His creation would live long into the future, but Dracula was built on foundations that stretched far into the past, to ancient superstitions and medieval science, to old religions and forgotten ways of life.
This is the first episode in our four-part series on the real history behind Bram Stoker's Dracula, Foul Things of the Night.
When Johann Rawl received the letter on Christmas Day, 1776, he put it away to read later.Maybe he thought it was a season's greeting and wanted to save it for the fireside.
But what it actually was, was a warning, delivered to the Hessian colonel, letting him know that General George Washington was crossing the Delaware and would soon attack his forces.
The next day, when Raw lost the Battle of Trenton and died from two Colonial Boxing Day musket balls, the letter was found, unopened in his vest pocket.As someone with 15,000 unread emails in his inbox, I feel like there's a lesson there.
Oh well, this is The Constant, a history of getting things wrong.I'm Mark Chrysler.Every episode, we look at the bad ideas, mistakes, and accidents that misshaped our world.Find us at constantpodcast.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, history fans, if you're listening to this podcast, then you'll love Airwave History Plus, now available on Apple Podcasts.
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For your free trial, search AirWave History Plus on Apple Podcasts and hit subscribe.That's AirWave History Plus, available now on Apple Podcasts.AirWave History Plus, the essential audio destination for history lovers.