You may think you know the story of Dracula because you read the actual book, but in fact it merely showed the surface of the true events it depicted.
I uncovered the original manuscript as compiled by Mina Harker and published by Bram Stoker in a dream I had, where it had extensive commentary from a later author revealing the true nature of events. When I awoke it was in my room exactly as it was in my dream, though it would later disappear as unexpectedly as it appeared.
While the text vanished, I had copied all of it, but could not fully grasp the implications of it. Then I received books from a secretive order that requested not to be named, detailing their rich global mythology combining different traditions, which offered additional context to the commentary I had seen.
I shall now summarize the hidden truths behind the narrative of Dracula.
The story begins long ago in an ancient civilization that lay hidden underground. A dragon was the lord of those people. Because of their prosperity they had many envious enemies. One day a certain king discovered their hidden location.
Promises of the underground’s treasures brought a vast army to this king, and he led them against the people of the underground. Against the dragon they would have fell, but the king cast a curse upon it that placed it in a trance. Thus the king’s army was successful in killing all the people of the underground. In return the dragon spoke a curse of its own.
“Though you may have destroyed my people, erased our ways and history, you will not leave victorious. None here shall take even a single ring from our remains. In my next life I shall end your bloodline. In yours you shall be born without bones.” Then the dragon fully fell victim to its cursed slumber. Because of its curse none of the invaders could take even a single treasure, and so they turned on the king and killed him for being unable to fulfill his promise of loot.
That king would reincarnate as Ivar the Boneless, a descendant of Tezcatlipoca-Odin1 who founded London, the greatest city in Scandinavia, as written in the Saga of Ragnar Lothbrok.
As for the dragon, it awakened one day when a slave had stolen from its hoard. In retaliation it rampaged across the land until it was slain by the hero Beowulf, as told in his epic. After its death the heart and bones of the dragon remained perfectly intact.
One day a traveling princess came to pay her respects to the departed ancient warriors and their might. The skull of the dragon spoke to her thus:
“If you wish to see ancient might such as that of myself and my slayer continue to exist in the modern world, devour my heart and kiss my skull. You will have a son, mighty and terrible, whose fame will outweigh that of his enemies.”
The princess consumed the dragon’s heart, kissed its skull, and returned to her homeland, where despite laying with no man she gave birth to a child who was named Dracula. Dracula was a reincarnation of the dragon, and he grew up to be a widely respected man.
One day an old man approached Dracula, who was in fact Quetzalcoatl-Anansi2 in disguise. The old man informed Dracula of the oath he swore in a past life, and offered to teach magic that would allow him to fulfill it. By accepting this offer Dracula was able to rise as a vampire after his death and plot his conquest of London.
However this plan would ultimately be foiled, for Beowulf had reincarnated in London as Jonathan Harker. Dracula learned of Beowulf’s reincarnation, leading to his attempt to isolate and kill Jonathan as a preventive measure, but obviously it didn’t work.
The incoming threat prompted King Arthur to return, who with the aid of Merlin (a manifestation of Quetzalcoatl-Anansi) disguised himself as a normal man without even changing his first name. At the same time the archangel/heavenly king Gabriel3 arrived in London under the alias of Quincey Morris, who quickly allied with Arthur. When Dracula arrived in London, Tezcatlipoca-Odin chose to intervene through his avatar Abraham van Helsing.
It is also important to note that Lucy did not actually die. Instead she was rescued by Pazuzu-Tsuno Daishi,4 who as commanded by Helsing whisked her away to the land of Magonia5 right as Dracula made his final assault on her. The ‘Lucy’ depicted in the novel after that point was merely an eidolon, a mirror image, but one whose vampiric transformation threatened the original. Arthur would later reunite with the true Lucy in Magonia and continues to await the true hour of his return there.
As for Quincey Morris, he merely returned to his true divine form on his supposed death.
Jonathan, Mina, and Seward, had no knowledge of the true nature of their comrades until well after Dracula was slain. Helsing was fond enough of Seward to make him a sukkal in his court after revealing his true divine identity.
While he had failed to destroy London, Dracula had succeeded in killing off the last descendant of Ivar the Boneless, Mr. Swales. Dracula was reborn as a naga named Alucard, who even as a youth had white hair. Alucard became a devotee of Dionysus,6 doing many penances and prayers, eventually becoming a divine judge of the dead.
Jonathan and Mina also ascended after their death and joined the court of Tezcatlipoca-Odin. Both of them are now regarded as apotropaic and marriage deities who can be invoked to ward off monsters. Individually Jonathan-Beowulf is a guardian of travelers and lawmen while Mina has associations with literacy and the protection of records.
Renfield had no secretive mythological associations or the like that I could find in the available sources. He was simply Renfield.
That is all I have to report of my discoveries regarding Dracula. I may have more to say of the vast underlying mythology in the future, and there may even be more hidden associations around the events of Dracula to uncover.
One of the twin supreme deities who created the universe. He rules over half the universe and is known to have eight consorts.
The supreme deity who rules the other half of the universe. Rather than fixed borders, his and his brother’s territories are always changing with the movement of the universe.
A child of Tezcatlipoca-Odin and Xochiquetzal-Artemis, as well as the consort of Tlaloc. While the text of the Dracula commentaries refer to Gabriel as male they are understood in this broader mythology as a figure with a more complex gender identity, in part due to also being the goddess Chalchiuhtlicue. Quincey is merely a male persona of Gabriel.
Another consort of Tezcatlipoca-Odin.
A kingdom of sorcerers and creatures of the wind that borders Oz and the Hundred Acre Wood and is beneath Neverland. Its king is Ghatotkacha who didn’t really die in the Mahabharata war and in a past life was King Solomon, the demons and angels of the Lesser Key of Solomon are all his concubines.
The heir of the cosmos, whose history is too complicated to summarize in a single footnote. The fact that he’s also Jesus (and all the other Buddhas like Zoroaster) is only scratching the surface.