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Bram Stoker
NOTE
Seven
years ago we all went through the flames. And the happiness of some of us
since then is, we think, well worth the pain we endured. It is an added joy
to Mina and to me that our boy's birthday is the same day as that on which
Quincey Morris died. His mother holds, I know, the secret belief that some
of our brave friend's spirit has passed into him. His bundle of names links
all our little band of men together. But we call him Quincey.
In the
summer of this year we made a journey to Transylvania, and went over the old
ground which was, and is, to us so full of vivid and terrible memories. It
was almost impossible to believe that the things which we had seen with our
own eyes and heard with our own ears were living truths. Every trace of all
that had been was blotted out. The castle stood as before, reared high
above a waste of desolation.
When
we got home we were talking of the old time, which we could all look back on
without despair, for Godalming and Seward are both happily married. I took
the papers from the safe where they had been ever since our return so long
ago. We were struck with the fact, that in all the mass of material of
which the record is composed, there is hardly one authentic document.
Nothing but a mass of typewriting, except the later notebooks of Mina and
Seward and myself, and Van Helsing's memorandum. We could hardly ask any
one, even did we wish to, to accept these as |
DRACULA
proofs
of so wild a story. Van Helsing summed it all up as he said, with our boy
on his knee.
"We
want no proofs. We ask none to believe us! This boy will some day know
what a brave and gallant woman his mother is. Already he knows her
sweetness and loving care. Later on he will understand how some men so
loved her, that they did dare much for her sake."
JONATHAN HARKER
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