Popular Culture Review Vol. 19, No. 2, Summer 2008 | Page 57

Evil in the Worlds of D racula and The H istorian 53 Gradually, she is changing into a vampire before her friends’ eyes. Van Helsing wonders “God! God! God!”; why are they so beset by such evil (156). Near death, Lucy attempts to bestow the vampire’s kiss on her beloved Arthur, thus spreading this blood disease. But Van Helsing prevents the kiss. After she is buried, Lucy walks at night as one of the undead, seducing small children for their blood. Later, we will discuss how Van Helsing and Lucy’s friends use Christian artifacts finally to release her from this vampiric horror. In a letter to Van Helsing, Mina exclaims “what terrible things there are in the world, and what an awful thing if that man [Dracula], that monster, be really in London” (213). Through these words, Stoker has Mina voice the philosophical problem of evil. While sad about her friend Lucy, Mina is happy to hear that her fiance Jonathan has escaped from his imprisonment and is recovering in the hospital from “a violent brain fever.” She travels to Budapest where they are married and then return to London. The second half of Stoker’s novel, therefore, deals with the Mina-Dracula conflict. One day, Jonathan and Mina see a youthful-looking Dracula in London, causing Jonathan to have a “slight relapse of his malady” (198). Mina later dreams that she is encountering a face in the mist; this is actually the evil Dracula coming after her in one of his shapes. Then we read from Dr. Seward’s diary that Dracula is caught by Van Helsing actually drinking from Mina in her room. Mina calls herself “Unclean! unclean!” (321). The rest of the Mina-Dracula conflict—a conflict of good versus evil—takes us from London back to Transylvania. The Reach of Evil in Stoker’s Dracula The reach of evil in Stoker’s Dracula is a function both of time and of geography. Although geography receives the most focus, time receives some coverage. To begin, Jonathan has traveled from London to the Carpathians, called there by Dracula to explain the count’s recent London estate purchase. In the castle’s library, Jonathan sees many reference works on English life that Dracula is studying, apparently as he transitions to the London area to spread his vampiric evil. Dracula has maps of London, Exeter, Whitby, and the Yorkshire coast. Significantly, Jonathan writes in his journal that the monstrous undead Dracula, sleeping in the midst of his earth-filled boxes under the castle, is “the being I was helping to transfer to London, where, perhaps, for centuries to come he might, amongst its teeming millions, satiate his lust for blood, and crea FR