Similar warnings against the ingesting of blood were soon a part of the teachings of all major religious faiths; however, the dictates of culture, magic, and religion could merely issue prohibitions concerning the shedding of blood by humans. Clerical dictates and civic pronouncements hold no threat to those who heed the whispers of the Old Gods to satisfy their bloodlust with the vital fluid of others. Ecclesiastical dogma and the terrors of Inquisitions can do nothing to quell the hunger of the real vampires who possess the bodies of their disciples and command them to crouch in the darkness and wait to drink the blood of men, women, and children and to drain them of their life force.
Mythic Vampires
The vampire legend has always been with us—from the shadows of the ancient Egyptian pyramids to the bright lights of New York City, the vampire’s evil remains eternal. From the villages of Uganda and Haiti to the remote regions of the Upper Amazon, indigenous people know the vampire in its many guises. The traditional Native American medicine priest, the Arctic Eskimo shaman, the Polynesian Kahuna, all know the myth of the vampire and take precautions against those whom they believe were once human and who are now among the undead who seek blood by night to sustain their dark energies.
Every culture has its own name for the night stalker. The word with which most of us are familiar rises from the Slavonic Magyar—vam, meaning blood; Tpir, meaning monster. To cite only a few other names for the vampire from various languages, there is the older English variation, vampyr; the Latin, sanguisuga; Serbian, vampir; Russian, upyr; Polish, Upirs; and the Greek, Brucolacas.
The physical appearance of a vampire in European folklore is grotesque, a nightmarish creature with twisted fangs and grasping talons. The cinematic depiction of the vampire in F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922) presented moviegoers with an accurate depiction of the traditional vampire. In this film, which was Murnau’s unauthorized version of the Count Dracula saga, we see actor Max Schreck’s loathsome bloodsucker, Count Orlock, skittering about in the shadows with dark-ringed, hollowed eyes, pointed devil ears, and hideous fangs. With his long, blood-stained talons, his egg-shaped head and pasty white complexion, Schreck’s Nosferatu captures the classic appearance of the undead as seen in the collective nightmares of humankind.
During many demon-haunted centuries in Europe, the dark powers of the vampire grew even stronger in the mind of the average man or woman. According to nervous admonitions, after dusk fell, the vampire’s hypnotic powers were irresistible, and his strength was that of a dozen men. He could transform himself into the form of a bat, a rat, an owl, a fox, or a wolf. He was able to see in the dark and to travel on moonbeams and mist. Sometimes, he had the power to vanish in a puff of smoke.
Desperate, frightened people sought to garland their windows with garlic or wolf bane, to obtain a vial of holy water, hang a crucifix on every wall, and say their prayers at night, but there was no certain protection from the attack of a vampire. Even a recently buried relative could have been cursed to become a vampire, and once night fell, the corpse, animated by blood lust, would claw his way out of the rot of the grave to seek unholy nourishment from his own family members. The vampire was a hideous predator that could only be killed by a stake through the heart and decapitation.
An alternate course of action against the vampire was to pry open its coffin during the daylight hours while it lay slumbering and pound a wooden stake through its heart—or, perhaps a bit safer, destroy the coffin while it was away and allow the rays of the early morning sun to scorch the monster into ashes.
Because we are so conditioned to hearing so many of the classic cinematic vampires speak with the same kind of foreign accent, some of us may be somewhat surprised when we learn that people around the world fear the nocturnal visits of the vampire.
In China, the Chiang-shih may appear as a corpselike being covered in green or white hair. Taking the lives of individuals traveling at night is the Chiang-shih’s only motivation in its wretched existence. The creature is equipped with long, sharp claws, jagged fangs, and glowing red eyes.
The Chiang-shih may also possess a human body so that it can appear as a seductive woman or a handsome man to its unsuspecting victim. In some instances, the entity reanimates a recently deceased corpse, especially that of someone who committed suicide.
In Chapter One I mentioned the seductive, blood-sucking Rakshasas of the Hindus, but this beautiful night stalker is not alone in Indian tradition. Throughout the centuries Mother India has endured a wide variety of vampiric night stalkers.
The Bhuta haunts the wilderness and the wastelands and often signals its presence by an eerie display of glowing lights. Because these hideous beings feed on rotting corpses, the bite of the Bhuta brings illness and sometimes fatal disease.
Vlad III the Impaler, a fifteenth-century Romanian prince, was the historical character upon whom Bram Stoker’s Count Dracula was based. The prince had a reputation for torturing his enemies in unspeakable ways.
The rapacious Brahmaparush is said to seize its victims by the head and drink their blood through a hole that it punctures in their skulls. Once it has had its fill of blood, the Brahmaparush eats the brains of those who have fallen into its clutches. When the gory feast has been completed, the vampire engages in a bizarre dance of triumph around the corpse.
According to ancient tradition, the vampire must return to his crypt, coffin, or hiding place before sunrise or the Sun’s rays will destroy him (illustration by Bill Oliver).
The Churel certainly extinguish the beautiful, seductive image that has been established by so many female vampires around the world. The Churel are nightmarishly ugly with wild strands of hair, sagging breasts, black tongues, and thick, rough lips. Since luring a handsome man to accompany them into the shadows is definitely out of the realm of possibility, the Churel throw seduction aside and viciously attack young men.
The aboriginal people of Australia speak of the Yara-Ma-Yha-Who, a nasty shadow dweller who uses the suckers on the ends of his fingers and toes to feast on the blood of its victims.
The Ashanti people of southern Ghana fear the Asasabonsam, vampiric entities that favor luring people into the deep forests. The Asasabonsam appear as regular humans—until they suddenly sprout hook-like legs and savage teeth to drink their victim’s blood.
Another vampiric being that bothers the tribes of Africa’s Gold Coast is the Obayifo. This creature might be explained as the spirit form of a male or female practitioner of the Dark Arts that leaves the host body at night and goes in search of human blood. Sometimes the being appears as a glowing ball of light before it rematerializes as a vampire and claims its victim.
After Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula (1897) became a popular stage play—and, in 1931, a classic horror film with Bela Lugosi portraying the Count as a sophisticated aristocrat—the image of the vampire as a hideous demon began to transform in the popular consciousness into that of an attractive stranger who possesses a bite that, while fatal, also promises eternal life.
In the decades that followed Lugosi’s iconic appearance as a sophisticated, seductive, hypnotic member of the undead, the vampire of legend—a demonic presence, wrapped in a rotting burial shroud, intent only on sating its bloodlust—gradually became replaced by beguilingly romantic figures.
Anne Rice, who has certainly contributed greatly to the literary rebirth of the vampire as a romantic figure in such novels as Interview with the Vampire, has said that the vampire