Today I would
like to tell you interesting facts about the life of Bram Stoker. I sincerely
hope that you will enjoy this information and you will learn a lot about the
writer's life.
⧪ Bram Stoker wrote 12 novels, including Dracula and
The Jewel of Seven Stars, and also published collections of short stories.
Dracula was originally titled The Undead. As Dracula says: “My revenge is just
begun! I spread it over centuries, and time is on my side.” To date, more than
1000 novels and 200 films have been made about the vampire Dracula.
⧪ Stoker, who had been an occasional freelance
contributor to The Daily Telegraph in the 1890s, began working regularly for
the paper as part of the literary staff from 1905 until 1910, during which time
he also wrote theatre reviews for the paper. During this period, he was also
working on The Lair of the White Worm.
⧪ Born in Dublin on 8 November 1847, Stoker had an
ancient, colourful lineage on his mother's side – including the legendary
sheriff of Galway, who hanged his own son. It was material the writer mined in
his fiction.
⧪ A key inspiration for Dracula was always said to
have been Vlad the Impaler, the 15th-century Transylvanian-born prince also
known as Vlad III Dracula of Wallachia. However, historian Fiona Fitzsimons
says: “Stoker did not use overtly Irish references in Dracula, but his main
theme is taken from Irish history – the history, we now learn, of his own
family – recast in the writer’s imagination.”
⧪ Stoker went to London as business manager to the
great actor Henry Irving of the Lyceum Theatre, who mesmerised him on their
first meeting with a spine-chilling recitation of Thomas Hood's verse horror
story The Dream of Eugene Aram.
⧪ He was a frequent visitor to the United States –
and met Presidents William McKinley and Teddy Roosevelt. He also met one of his
literary idols, Walt Whitman.
⧪ Stoker had a lifelong interest in art, and was a
founder of the Dublin Sketching Club in 1874.
⧪ Stoker was a sickly child, mostly bed-ridden during
his early years. During this time, his mother entertained him with stories and
legends from Sligo, which included supernatural tales and accounts of death and
disease.
⧪ In 1878 Stoker married actress Florence Balcombe,
they settled in London and together had a son named Irving Noel Thornley.
During this time, he became friends with fellow Irishmen Oscar Wilde and
William Butler Yeats, as well as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of the famous
Sherlock Holmes.
⧪ There remains some controversy about what killed
Bram Stoker on 20 April 1912. Stoker’s nephew Daniel Farson published a
biography in 1975 in which he suggested that the death certificate stating one
of the causes of death as ‘Locomotor Ataxy 6 months’, a euphemistic way of
avoiding public notice of citing the sexually transmitted disease syphilis.

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