Ordo Antichristianus Illuminati®
Culture of the Vampyri {Rite of the Nosferatu}
by Joshua J. Seraphim {Frater Annuit Coeptis} copyright © A.D. 2005 All rights reserved.
The Rite of the Nosferatu given here is the public version, the full length version used by Initiates of the O.·.A.·.I.·. is available in Babylon: Secret Rituals of Illuminati
Now and again, one hearkens to a hissing whisper, silent and sibilant as the slithering of the serpent. Vampyr. Amidst the shadowy shards of magic and the occult, there is no figure so malignant so dreaded and noxious, yet glamorized with fetishes of fear, neither god nor devil yet partakes of both, than the apocryphal Vampyr. Foul and exotic, erotic are the ravages and folklore of Vampyri. The tradition of the Vampyri is of dateless antiquity, approached often with perplexing and fantasized scholarship. To defog the lore of Vampyri, the investigator and recorder must dight an aura of cautious criticism and skepticism in unearthing the paranormal phenomena of this tradition. Theologians and investigators often are reluctant in assigning the intervention of a supernatural agency to inexplicable events that eroticize the human imagination. In the obscure grimoires of witchcraft, diabolatry, and incantations of necromancy, one is assailed homogeneously with the same supernatural happenings ascribed to a common thread of shadowy character.
Foremost amongst such occult phenomena are lycanthropy and vampirism. In the old
countries, there is whispered a close connexion between the lycanthrope and
vampyr. Religion marched on with civilization, persisting across history losing
and regaining its monstrous shades of superstitious heresy, yet it is the horror
of diablerie, and necromancy that retains the truth of fear exemplified in the
Vampyr. The end of the seventeenth century, and more particular the beginning of
the eighteenth century appeared a veritable epidemic of alleged vampyric
activity. The superstitious faith of early Christians seems to posit an idea
that spirits of the dead retained a corporeity, reflected in the treatise “De
Anima” {circa A.D. 208-211} by Bishop Tertullian of Carthage. For the good
Christian, the Vampyr is the most dreaded of ghouls, for the undead have no
world at all, such toxic beings possess no hierarchic office, be it devil or
angel. The edicts of the Fourth Lateran Council under Pope Innocent III, A.D.
1215, lay down “Diabolus enim et alii daemons a Deo quidem natura create sunt
boni, sed ipsi per se facti sunt mali.”
The origins of Vampyri traditions are versed in melancholic romanticism and wild
sensationalism, offering the investigator a look into the primal relationship
between soul and body. Archetypal conventions of the “Vampyri” and “Vampirism”
have existed since the First Dynasty of Ur in the XXVIIth Century of Sumerian
culture. From the echoing voids of hidden history, the earliest inhabitants of
Ur, Kush, and Babylon always held a belief in dark and malignant powers of
diabolatry. Inhabitants of early antiquity in Babylonia recognized a triad of
malignant specters ready to invade the minds and flesh of clods whom expose
themselves to such antediluvian phenomena through negligence or accident.
A class of Babylonian spirits specters thought to perambulate aimlessly upon the
face of the earth from their graves. A second caste of specters in Assyrian and
the ancient countries were said to be a monstrous hybrid of human and demonic
entities; a third caste of specters is referred to in their various incantations
as “lilîtu, {Sumerian ‘night monster’}” “âhhazu, {Sumerian, ‘seizers’}” “îlu
limnu, {‘evil god’ in Sumerian}” In the English language, these entities
associated in Babylonian antiquity with plagues and pestilence, are the evil
ones, or liars-in-wait. The antediluvian thread to such legendary and mythic
entities begins with the Sumerian lî-la, Akkadian lîlu. The demons of the lîlu
grade are the îdlu lîli, the ardat lîlu, and the lilîtu all were summoned in
barren areas such as deserts.
Such castes of entities were said to instill terror by haunting desolate places
and seducing young men at night as apparitions and spawning them ghostly
children, even strangling the brood of women deemed “impure” by cultural-social
construct. Diverse subdivisions also existed from the Assyrian pantheons,
including the well-known pestilent spirit, utukku that according to scholar Dr.
R. Campbell Thompson {London, 1903} differs from the allegedly malevolent. The
êdimmu spirit of the unburied dead according to Campbell finds no rest and was
condoned to prowl across the earth so long as the corpse remains unburied. A
description of this ghoul is given by the ghost of Ea-bani to Gilgamesh in the
“Epic of Gilgamesh” {Tablet xii}: “The man whose corpse lieth in the desert Thou
and I have often seen such an one His spirit resteth not in the earth; The man
whose spirit hath none to care for it Thou and I have often seen such an one,
The dregs of the vessel--the leavings of the feast, And that which is cast out
into the street are his food.”
Analogous specters of calamitous souls whom know no solace are described as
“Whether thou art a ghost unburied, Or a ghost that none careth for, Or a ghost
with none to make offerings to it. Or a ghost that hath none to pour libations
to it, Or a ghost that hath no prosperity.” May neglected specters often were
believed by Elamites, and other cultures of antiquity to return from the abodes
of the undead to prowl for what the soul has been deprived of while living. A
Babylonian incantation provided by Dr. R.C. Thompson lists a sacerdotal
incantation to exorcize against ghoulish copula in which diverse grades of
vampyric entities are indicted:
“Whether thou are a ghost that has come from the earth, Or a phantom of night
that hath no couch, Or a woman (that hath died) a virgin, Or a man (that hath
died) unmarried, Or one that lieth dead in the desert, Or one that lieth dead in
the desert, uncovered with earth, Or one that in the desert Or one that hath
been torn from a date palm, Or one that cometh through the waters in a boat, Or
a ghost unburied, Or a ghost that none careth for, Or a ghost with none to make
offerings, Or a ghost with none to pour libations, Or a ghost that hath no
posterity, Or a hag-demon, Or a ghoul, Or a robber-sprite, Or a harlot (that
hath died) whose body is sick, Or a woman (that hath died) in travail, Or a
woman (that hath died) with a babe at her breast, Or a weeping woman (that hath
died) with a babe at her breast, Or an evil man (that hath died), Or an (evil)
spirit, Or one that haunteth (the neighborhood), Or one that haunteth (the
vicinity), Or whether thou be one with whom on a day (I have eaten), Or whether
thou be one with whom on a day (I have drunk), Or with whom on a day I have
anointed myself, Or with whom on a day I have clothed myself, Or whether thou be
one with whom I have entered and eaten, Or with whom I have entered and drunk,
Or with whom I have entered and anointed myself, Or with whom I have entered and
clothed myself, Or whether thou be one with whom I have eaten food when I was
hungry, Or with whom I have drunk water when I was thirsty, Or with whom I have
anointed myself with oil when I was sore, Or with whom when I was cold I have
clothed his nakedness with a garment, (Whatever thou be) until thou art removed,
Until thou departest from the body of the man, the son of his god, Thou shalt
have no food to eat, Thou shalt have no water to drink, If thou wouldst fly up
to heaven Thou shalt have no wings, If thou wouldst lurk in ambush on earth,
Thou shalt secure no resting-place. Unto the man, the son of his god--come not
nigh, Get thee hence! Place not thy head upon his head, Place not thy (hand)
upon his hand, Place not thy foot upon his foot, With thy hand touch him not,
Turn (not) thy back upon him, Lift not thine eyes (against him), Look not behind
thee, Gibber not against him, Into the house enter thou not, Through the fence
break thou not, Into the chamber enter thou not, In the midst of the city
encircle him not, Near him make no circuit; By the Word of Ea, May the man, the
son of his god, Become pure, become clean, become bright! May his welfare be
secured at the kindly hands of the gods.”
{Dr. R. Campbell Thompson “The Devils and Evil Spirits of Babylonia” London,
1903 vol. pg. xxviii}
Here we see the numerous incantations against the unburied corpses, which lay
upon the earth, a wandering ghost, referring readily to the gravity the ancient
Greek and Egyptians placed upon funerary rites. Such unburied ghosts’
predilection for human blood is committed to exorcism in the most unambiguous
prayers again translated by Dr. R Campbell Thompson:
“ Spirits that minish heaven and earth, That minish the land, Spirits that
minish the land, Of giant strength, Of giant strength and giant tread, Demons
(like) raging bulls, great ghosts, Ghosts that break through all houses, Demons
that have no shame, Seven are they! Knowing no care, They grind the land like
corn Knowing no mercy. They rage against mankind: They spill their blood like
rain, Devouring their flesh, (and) sucking their veins. Where the images of the
gods are, there they quake In the Temple of Nabû, who fertilizes the shoots of
wheat. They are demons full of violence Ceaselessly devouring blood. Invoke the
ban against them, That they no more return to this neighborhood. By heaven be ye
exorcised! By Earth be ye exorcised!”
The primacy of these incantations threads the archaic traditions of unburied,
parasitical entities that posed terror in the lore of eld.
The Legend of Lilith evolves from diverse Religious and cultural sources,
appearing in the Alphabet of Ben Sira, the Zohar, and in the Epic of Gilgamesh.
Lilith as a primal vampyric effigy in cultures of antiquity experiences
evolutions from archaic goddess to colorless ghost and desert terror. In the
philosophy of the Hebrew Qabalah, Lilith corresponds to the daemon of Malchut in
the Qlifot {the World of Shells, or husks). Pertaining to Qabalah every world is
a husk of the world above and below. The Qlifot are shells of the dead, and by
conquering the fear of the Mystery of Death does the Initiate attain to the
Vision of the Wrathful Maiden. Lilith is the arcane archetype of sexual
dominance and the fear of Death, the archetypal primacy of Lilith annihilates
litanies of inhibitions in the human psyche. Etymological origins of Lilith
independent of Jehovian-Semitic templates point to the Sumero-Babylonian Lilû,
which Dr. Thompson translates to “a demon equivalent to a male vampire.” As
derived from Sumerian, Lila refers to “wind,” or “storm.” Opting for an Akkadian
translation, Dr. Thompson suggests Lalu, also Lulu as “lecherous,” and
“wandering.”
From the Akkadian Lilitû and her Sumero-Babylonian compliments, Ardat-Lili,
Idlu-Lili, and Lamaştû, derives the Semitic LYLYT {Lilith}. The Lilitû primarily
feasted upon women and children, referred to by the terrified inhabitants of Ur
and Babylon as night-ghosts that roamed the deserts away from populace.
Pictographs from 800 B.C. to 500 B.C. Babylonia depict “Lilith” in the company
of snakes and other abominable animals, keeping with themes of her malevolence
in Babylonian pottery, Persian and Jewish amulets and in the Qumran scrolls. The
night-ghosts here evolved into the Jehovian mythopoeia seeping into the
Christian paradigms of diabolatry.
Isaiah 34; xiv in the Vulgate refers to “he-goats,” “hairy monsters,” again
carried over from Judaic paradigm. The Vulgate thusly reads; “Et occurrent
daemonia onocentauris, et pilosus clamabit alter ad alterum; ibi cubauit lamia,
et inuenit sibi requiem.” The Greek Lamia possibly refers to Lamiae, unclean
spirits though to feed of blood, a related term in Latin, if not mythologically
is strix, the screech owl. Judaic allusions to spectral ghosts concerned with
bloodfeasting, stem mostly from commandments against consumption of blood found
in the Book of Proverbs and Leviticus. Few cultures and religions of antiquity
have shunned the mysterious powers intimated in blood consumption. The soul of
animals and man was ascribed to reside in the blood, hence the implications in
ancient Chinese medicinal texts, references in the Zend Avesta, and Roman lore
that the feasting of blood provided for the dead and living praetor-human powers
such as discerptibility, subtility, obfuscation, domination, auspex and the
like.
The archaic practices of propitiation from the dead and extricating blood to
serve as sacral fluids were uncompromisingly deplored as heathenish in Mosaic
canon. Hygienic and social prohibitions against blood exchange and consumption
denounced with divine prejudice the perpetrators of these heresies as demon
leeches spreading black magic. Divine sanctions against vampirism and
blood-drinking stem from the Book of Proverbs with references to demonic
entities in Chapter XXX, verse 15 {KJV};
“The horseleach hath two daughters, {crying}, Give, give. There are three
[things that] are never satisfied, {yea}, four {things} say not, {It is}
enough:” The vulgate has: “sanguisugae duae sunt filiae dicentes adfer adfer
tria sunt insaturabilia et quartum quod numquam dicit sufficit.” Sanguisugae
translates as “horseleech,” and the Greek scriptures provide the word “βδέλλη.”
The term horseleech undoubtedly refers to a vampiric source or taboo associated
with extricating blood.
Further divine commands against catheterizing and consuming blood come again
from Judaic law in the Old Testament. In Leviticus XVII: 10-14 the Vulgate
translates:
“homo quilibet de domo Israhel et de advenis qui
peregrinantur inter eos si comederit sanguinem obfirmabo faciem meam contra
animam illius et disperdam eam de populo suo. quia anima carnis in sanguine est
et ego dedi illum vobis ut super altare in eo expietis pro animabus vestris et
sanguis pro animae piaculo sit. idcirco dixi filiis Israhel omnis anima ex vobis
non comedet sanguinem nec ex advenis qui peregrinantur inter vos. homo quicumque
de filiis Israhel et de advenis qui peregrinantur apud vos si venatione atque
aucupio ceperit feram vel avem quibus vesci licitum est fundat sanguinem eius et
operiat illum terra. anima enim omnis carnis in sanguine est unde dixi filiis
Israhel sanguinem universae carnis non comedetis quia anima carnis in sanguine
est et quicumque comederit illum interibit.”
The Revised Standard Version gives the English,
“If any man of the house of Israel or of the strangers that sojourn among
them eats any blood, I will set my face against that person who eats blood, and
will cut him off from among his people. For the life of the flesh is in the
blood; and I have given it for you upon the altar to make atonement for your
souls; for it is the blood that makes atonement, by reason of the life.
Therefore I have said to the people of Israel, No person among you shall eat
blood, neither shall any stranger who sojourns among you eat blood. Any man also
of the people of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn among them, who takes
in hunting any beast or bird that may be eaten shall pour out its blood and
cover it with dust. For the life of every creature is the blood of it; therefore
I have said to the people of Israel, You shall not eat the blood of any
creature, for the life of every creature is its blood; whoever eats it shall be
cut off.” Thus Biblical injunctions against consuming blood heralded a
proto-Judaic belief, inherited from Babylonian and Sumerian diabolatry, that
blood mysteriously contained the primal construct of the soul. Hence, a fruitful
explanation of what entices a vampiric entity to vitalize and rejuvenate their
own “dead” bodies.
Judaic prohibitions against catheterizing blood extend to making incisions upon
the living body and upon the dead, also to shaving parts of the dead. Although
such codes are presumably hygienic, one can discern the fixation against toiling
with the essence of blood in such customs banned again in Leviticus:
“non comedetis cum sanguine
non augurabimini nec observabitis somnia. neque in rotundum adtondebitis comam
nec radatis barbam.
et super mortuo non incidetis carnem vestram neque figuras aliquas et stigmata
facietis vobis ego Dominus.”
The authors of Leviticus seemingly were concerned with preserving Mosaic hygienic codes; yet again the taboo against consuming blood or marking incisions upon the living and the dead clearly disturbed the Levitican forgers.
The word “vampire” in much beastly black magic superstition originally stems
from Slavonic origin. The linguistic origins of the word come from variants in
the same Russian, Polish, Czech, Bulgarian, and Romany roots. The English
vampire {vampire} is rooted in the Magyar vampr, and nosufur-atu as both terms
denote references to “unclean” and “plague-carrier.” The same linguistic
variants occur in the Bulgarian vapir, vepir, the Russian upyr, and Polish upier.
A less probable derivation is the Sanskrit pâ, pî, and pî’bâmi, the Slavic
origins also likely emerging from the Latin bibo, bibere, “to drink.” Compare
vampir with the Lithuanian wempti, “to drink,” and wampiti, “to growl, to
mutter,” and we infer characteristics of intoxication via blood drinking. Old
folklore in Croatia refers to a blood-drunken ghoul as pijauica, Serbian and
Slovakian speak of the same as a vlkodlak. The conception of the folkish
Medieval vampir is peculiar to the Balkan countries, in Russia, Bohemia,
Silesia, Hungary, parts of Greece, and Moravia with native Romany still leery of
the body foully endued with blood and accursed state of neither living nor dead.
Dark traditions of the Vampyr in literature first began to appear in gothic
poetic and literary circles in the seventeenth and later the eighteenth
centuries. Startling themes of the occult and vampirism capture the attention of
academic and philosophic treatises in German universities imbued with
anti-catholic sentiment. Gothic folklore and fetishes of fantasy vis-à-vis
vampirism peaked during the Bohemian literary genre of the eighteenth century
most notably The Vampyre: a Tale by Lord Byron {writ by Dr. John William
Polidori, physician and companion to the poet Lord Byron} published 1 April
1819, and the more infamous Abraham Stoker’s Dracula, A Tale published 1897.
Philosophical and scholarly dissertations on the occult and vampirism in German
universities at Cologne {Leone Allacci, De Græcorum hodie quorundam
opinationibus} and Leipzig {Phillip Rohr, De Masticatione Mortuorum} provided
the stage for John Christian Harenberg’s Von Vampyren, published 1739. First use
of the term vampire traces to early compositions of British literature, the
first incidence of the word is found in The Travels of Three English Gentlemen
published around 1734.
Gioseppe Davanzati {Archbishop of Alexandria} published in 1744 his treatise
Dissertazione sopra I Vampiri, a copy of which was presented to the Pontiff H.H.
Benedict XIV. Dissertazione sopra I Vampiri was one of the first comprehensive
volumes dedicated to “investigating” {why would the Roman Catholic Church be as
engrossed in such occult practices as exorcism, diablerie , and
vampirism?}dæmonic instances of vampyri and their “culture” and generation in
mankind’s history. Archbishop Davanzati displays reputable knowledge of folklore
surrounding the dark traditions and official reports of vampirism in the old
country of eastern Europe and the Orient. Archbishop Davanzati decides that the
vampire cannot be placed in a category of phantoms and apparitions but begged a
different unorthodox explanation under the stress of actual reports of vampire
cases to his diocese.
Allaci’s De Græcorum hodie quorundam opinationibus cites the vampire as a
vrykolakas “a body of a man of wicked and debauched life, very often of one
whom has been excommunicated by his bishop. Such bodies do not like other
corpses suffer decomposition after burial nor fall to dust…” According to
Allaci, the vrykolakas roams about the streets of a village, knocking upon the
hearth and summoning members of the household by name, and if the person called
unwittingly answers, s/he is doomed to die the following day. Needless to say,
both common folk and Church officiates and ecclesia both believed in the
vampire. The scribes of the Malleus Maleficarum teach in the first volume how
there are “Three Necessary concomitants of Witchcraft, which are the Devil, the
Dead Body, and the Permission of God.” Vampyres in the Malleus Maleficarum are
thought to be specters of antiquities, fetid ghosts spewed forth from Purgatory.
Roman Catholic ecclesia who learnt from the Malleus Maleficarum believed
vrykolakas rested in his grave on Saturday, and could not roam abroad. Recall
during the Inquisition era that witches for their Sabbats particularly avoided
Saturday, sacred to the Immaculate Mother of God. Nevertheless, many witches did
indeed summon on their Sabbats, the unclean, the dead trapped in their maddening
nightmarish lust for blood.
The necro-sadistic diablerie and bacchanalia of Countess Báthory Erzsébet, also
known as Countess Elizabeth Báthory spent her life at Čachtice Castle. Countess
Báthory with four of her handmaidens was said to have murdered dozens, or
hundreds {depending on the source} of young girls, consuming their blood and
meticulously recording it in her diaries. Various legends about her life,
including the idea that she bathed in or drank the blood of servant girls, are
thought by some to have been the origin of numerous vampire myths, the Dracula
story, and the trope of the sexually sadistic vampyress in particular. Legends
rose around the bloody Countess concerning vampirism and necro-sadism earned her
the epithet “la comtesse hongroise sanguinaire.” While she was investigated in
absentia of her abominations, Elizabeth was kept under stern house arrest and
waged her defense by a furious thread of letters. The bloody countess was
bricked up in her own private chamber of her castle, kept alive only by food
poked through a slit in the door, and died there on 21 August 1614.
To speak of the death-dealing spectre of antiquity, the maleficent vampyr theme
in literature, one must take into consideration the vast wealth of vampyr-themed
material in print, on stage and film. No theme has trumped such a seduction with
the dark arte than the vampyr. An exhaustive inquiry into vampiric themes in
literature is nigh impossible. Fetishes over vampirism, bloodletting,
mutilation, masochism, mortification, and fantasy role-playing by despondent and
often morose teenagers and 20-somethings {or older cyber-vampires cloaking their
aliases on the Internet}. We find passing references to the vampyr in archaic
poetry such as Goethe’s ballad Die Braut von Korinth {“The Bride of Korinth”
1797}. Goethe’s Die Baut von Korinth is the originator of the vampiric theme in
literature and poetry. Goethe himself refers to his vampiric poem as a ballad of
love from beyond the grave. Images of blood-drinking and the undead are conjured
in the lines: “Eben schlug die dumpfe Geisterstunde, Und nun schien es ihr
erst wohl zu sein. Gierig schlürfte sie mit blassem Munde Nun den dunkel
blutgefärbten Wein ... Aus dem Grabe werd ich ausgetrieben, Noch zu suchen das
vermißte Gut, Noch den schon verlornen Mann zu lieben Und zu saugen seines
Herzens Blut. Ists um den geschehn, Muß nach andern gehn, Und das junge Volk
erliegt der Wut ...”
“Varney the Vampire” also titled the “Feast of Blood” published in 1845 as
another notable predecessor to Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Thomas Preskett Prest, a
prolific novelist authored “Varney the Vampire” however there are suggestions of
authorship to James Malcolm Rymer, or a variety of hands. Notable vampyri themes
also deserve mention are Edgar Allen Poe’s “Berenic, Montella, The Fall of the
House of Usher, and The Oval Portrait” all written between 1835 and 1842. The
Marquis D.A.F. de Sade’s Justin: Misfortunes of Virtue {1791}, and Juliette
{1798} depict scenes of eros noir, bacchanalia and sexual vampirism. King
Virkram and the Vampire: Tales of Hindu Devilry by Sir Richard F. Burton {1870}
states in the preface that the reanimation of dead bodies as ghouls and vampires
“is an old and thoroughly Hindu repertory.” Burton informs us the term baital
refers to Sanskrit Vetāla-pancha-Vinshati, a vampire that animates the dead.
Decadent artists such as Charles P. Baudelaire {Les fleurs du mal}, Arthur
Rimbaud {Une Saison en Enfer}, Comte de Lautréamont {Les Chants de Maldoror},
Edvard Munch {Vampire}, included in their literature and paintings themes of the
vampyr and the macabre. The macabre transition between Romanticism and Modernism
included themes of decadence and ghoulish depictions of those forgotten of
death. The figure of the vampyr evolved from dark folklore and superstitions.
All the elegant requiems, novenas, and prayers that solace Holy Souls of the
dead are nothing but our fears to prevent those forgotten of death to return and
partake of their macabre bloodfeasts. Vampyri in the old country are more than
sheltered shadows. Past the breaches of a pale Christianity it is the derelict
and forgotten whom seek to invoke the vampyri. These anemic souls fall prey
endlessly to the dark necromancy of vampyri.
John William Polidori {1795-1821} is credited by the gothic underworld and most
literati as the creator of the vampire genre of fantasy fiction. Polidori
entered the Baron G.G. Byron’s service in 1816 as a personal physician and
escort on trips throughout the old country. After a reading of Tales from the
Dead {Leipzig, 1813} a horror anthology, Lord Byron suggested his entourage each
write a horror story. The great Mary Shelley and Polidori himself later scribed
their literary masterpieces, Frankenstein and The Vampyr. The Vampyr first
published in the April 1819 issue of New Monthly Magazine. Polidori based his
main vampyric protagonist on Lord Byron, jokingly naming the beast “Lord
Ruthven.” The Vampyr was re-released under a second edition credited to Byron’s
authorship, much to the dismay of both men. Lord Byron published The Giaour in
1813. The Giaour is a poem considered by the Literati as one of the first pieces
of vampyric-themed fiction. Giaour, is a Turkish word for “infidel” similar to
the Arabic “nonbeliever,” kafir. The poem is one of the first examples of
Romantic Orientalism notable for its mention of vampires in the lines:
“But first, on earth as Vampire sent, Thy corpse shall from its tomb be rent:
Then ghastly haunt thy native place, And suck the blood of all thy race; There
from thy daughter, sister, wife, At midnight drain the stream of life; Yet
loathe the banquet which perforce Must feed thy livid living corpse: Thy victims
ere they yet expire Shall know the demon for their sire, As cursing thee, thou
cursing them, Thy flowers are wither'd on the stem. But one that for thy crime
must fall, The youngest, most beloved of all, Shall bless thee with a father's
name - That word shall wrap thy heart in flame! Yet must thou end thy task, and
mark Her cheek's last tinge, her eye's last spark, And the last glassy glance
must view Which freezes o'er its lifeless blue; Then with unhallow'd hand shalt
tear The tresses of her yellow hair, Of which in life a lock when shorn,
Affection's fondest pledge was worn, But now is borne away by thee, Memorial of
thine agony ! Wet with thine own best blood shall drip Thy gnashing tooth and
haggard lip; Then stalking to thy sullen grave, Go - and with gouls and Afrits
rave; Till these in horror shrink away From spectre more accursed than they! “
A stage adoption of The Vampyr was produced in Paris 13 June 1820 at the Théâtre
de la Porte-Saint Martin. A successful revival of the drama occurred in 1823 at
the same locale, and again in 1851 at the Ambigu-Comique. The stage play was
reproduced successfully throughout the 1820s in Paris theatres ripe with
Bohemianism and Romanticism. Algernon Blackwood’s short tale The Transfer
published in 1911 features a type of human psychic-vampire. I use the term
“psychic-vampire” sparingly since such a concept is utter drivel. Carmilla a
novella by Joseph Sheridan le Fanu {pub. 1872} is a young woman’s sordid tale of
contact with a lesbian vampire. I recommend the novel to any dilettante of
gothic and antiquated literature, especially featuring lesbianism and vampirism
in the same novel. Carmilla immediately predates perhaps the masterpiece and
most imitated and reproduced work of vampiric literature, Abraham Stoker’s
Dracula.
Dracula is an epistolary novel published in 1897 by Abraham “Bram” Stoker, an
initiate of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Stoker spent eight years
researching vampiric folklore and anthologies for his novel. The original title
for Dracula was The Un-Dead, yet in his research, Stoker encountered the
Hungarian word draçûl, which means “dragon.” The story of Stoker’s Dracula bares
historic connections to Vlad III Tepeş Draculae of Wallachia, a fine fellow said
to have brutally murdered thousands of criminals, degenerates, political rivals,
and invading Muslim Turks by his favorite method of impaling them on sharp
shaft. Vlad III contributed to the folklore built around him during his lifespan
by bathing in, and allegedly drinking the blood of his victims.
Historically, the name “Dracula” is derived from a secret fraternal occult order
of Christian knights called the Order of the Dragon, founded by King Sigismund
of Hungary {elected Holy Roman Emperor in 1410} to uphold Christianity and
defend the Empire against the Ottoman Turks. Vlad II Dracul Tepeş, father of our
protagonist Vlad III Tepeş, was admitted to the Order around 1431 due to his
bravery in fighting the Muslim Turks. From his initiation into the Order of the
Dragon in 1431 onward, Vlad II wore the emblem of the Order that was an imperial
dragon. As sovereign of Wallachia Vlad II Tepeş’ coinage bore the imperial
dragon. In archaic Roumanian and Hungarian, the suffix –ulae translates as the
genitive “son of.” Thus draculae refers to not only the son of the Tepeş
lineage, but a son invested with the Order of the Dragon, a Hungarian fraternal
occult Order. Could you tell, dear ones, this author is a proud Hungarian? The
heritage is in the blood.
Dracula inevitably was produced on stage at the Wimbledon Theatre in 1925, again
in another version at the Little Theatre in 1927. “Uncle” Béla Lugosi brought
the novel to life in the 1927 Broadway adoption, later starring in Tod
Browning’s 1931 Univeral Pictures film, Dracula that spawned Béla’s career and
notoriety along with the immortality of Dracula and vampryi legend. Vampyri
literature possesses vast tracts of sexual xenophobia on stage, film, and in
novels. Such sexual xenophobia centres upon the threat of the monstrous Other,
the Beast, who not only steals women but converts them into Serpents of Lust
themselves. The sexuality of female victims in vampyric literature and film is
released in the ‘wrong way,’ by a foreigner, a Beast neither man nor spectre, a
master of black magic who has achieved what the men fear they may be unable to
accomplish. Sexuality and Vampirism coalesce in literature, film, and on stage
with vampyric themes. Contemporary readers and novelists more often see the
vampyr’s bestial primacy and sexual ambiguity as seductive.
Specters of antiquity in ancient Græco-Roman culture were dreaded by folk as
blood-sucking ghosts or re-animated bodies of the dead. Re-animated bodies in
Greek and Roman lore were endowed with occult powers, thus to ancient folk
vampirism was threaded to black magic. The Laruæ were hideous and deformed hags,
most likely plague-stricken women or lepers. Mormo and. Lamiæ were thought by
ancient writers to be women possessed with the power to remove their eyes and
suck up blood. These would appear in the form of seductive courtesans, beguiling
some damoiseau into their bestiality to drink of his bloody death. Lamiæ were
also called Striges in ancient Rome. Corinthians knew the Ephialtæ, Hyphialtæ,
Incubi, and Succubi as night-specters, ghosts of flesh neither dead nor living
trapped in their nightmares. Ancient writers believed that the plague and
dementia caused the facade of these beasts.
Some people argue that vampire stories might have been influenced by a rare
illness called porphyria. The disease disrupts the production of heme. People
with extreme cases of this hereditary disease can be so sensitive to sunlight
that they can get sunburn through heavy cloud cover, causing them to be
nocturnal and avoid all light. People with porphyria can also have red eyes and
teeth, resulting from buildup of red heme intermediates {porphyrins}. Certain
forms of porphyria are also associated with neurological symptoms, which can
create psychiatric disorders. However, the hypotheses that porphyria sufferers
"crave" the heme in human blood, or that the consumption of blood might ease the
symptoms of porphyria, are based in ignorance.
The Serpent in the form of Lilith initiated Mankind, the true Beast with
seduction and dark eroticism by providing the forbidden fruit of death to Eve,
her female Lover and compliment. In her secret initiations with Eve, appearing
to Her as a Serpent, Lilith took up the cloak of the primal vampyr, the seducer
and blood eater. Through Eve, Lilith taught Mankind forbidden paths of the Black
and Red Serpent ~ of Lust and Love. Vampyri are the redolent Other shrouded
within gardens of twilight, daring mortals to walk among their crossroads that
lead into the Nightside of Eden. The antediluvian Vampyr independent of cultural
assimilation is one forgotten of death whom contains the shadowed secrets of the
Holy Grail, the alchemical elixir, the End of Flesh. Blood is the nectar and
sustenance of life, it courses and spurts throughout veins, arteries, and skin.
Blood contains the genetic blueprints of the Holy Soul, it is the dark well of
infernal angels. The Vampyri are those forgotten of death whom feed from this
nectar, be it by their bloodfeasts or use of blood in diablerie and sorcery.
Vampyri through bloodfeasts and diablerie breach the boundaries of immortality
penetrating the darkest depths of the psyche. The Vampyri survive beyond the
grave and captivate the darkest human fantasies. Contrary to the fetid
convictions of many, such enshrouded Paths of “vampirism,” and “Vampyri” are not
profitable. Such nightshaded Paths are viewed as glamorous by the weak-willed
and innocent, and, seductive by the corrupt of Will. Fatalistic perceptions of
ethics, life & death, and religion have no bearing in such Paths of iniquity. To
initiate into the nightmares of the Vampyric crossroads, the individual must
shred asunder all psychic, and psychological strains and weaknesses conditioned
since birth. Essentially the individual must harrow the gates of Hades, and
assail the Abyss of the psyche, overcoming the sensational and seductive glamour
of Dark sorcery. Light and dark are no more than nomenclature: words that
describe how little we understand. Vampyri is nothing more than raw, uninhibited
fantasy and sexual fetish.
In Vampyric culture and sorcery, “Man” is a ghost, caught in the glamour and
arousal of the nefesh. Earth is at once, for such a precarious lot, Perdition
and Gehenna. Only those whom have descended and risen from the Midnight of the
Soul, and drank the waters of death could ever touch the Rose of Iniquity.
Vampyri are souls who drank the poison of life. Every Vampyri forgotten of death
sleeps in a nightmare, a never-ending purgatory that is a catacomb of neither
life nor death. These specters of antiquity from the earliest recorded religions
to the darkest wells of Mankind’s erotic fantasies roam a labyrinthe of
nightmares. Vampyri are the darkest projections of fear and erotic fetish,
mocked since the dawn of religion by the all-seeing Endless Eye. The infernal
soul of the Vampyri is a shadow of Mankind’s lost soul, reflecting the breach
between nothingness and a void of forever.
Rite of the Nosferatu
.·.
Acquirements.·. chalice, Scourge flail or instrument to draw blood, Frankincense, Myrrh, and Opium incense, fresh grave soil, spider {or worm}, 1 Red CandleAltar in West quadrant. A living spider is contained upon the altar. Light a red candle. Sprinkle fresh grave soil around thee, circumambulate thrice, counter-clockwise tracing the Ourobouris around thee; give Sign of the Cross with your hand upon each passing of the West. Thou shalt not fear the ghouls residing in the darkest wells of the mind, be ye firm in ye incantations, provident, and dutiful.
Return to the centre of the chamber. Face west and give Signs of Lilith {Lilith Mourning, Lilith Waning, Lilith’s Malediction}. Face south and give Signs of Laylah {the Widow and Son, Laylah Mourning, Virgin Laylah, Puella the Chastity of Laylah}. Face east and give Sign of Osiris Slain {Sign of the Cross}. Face north and give Sign of Nosferatu {Cain, F.·. & A.·.M.·. Sign of Fellow Craft, F.·. & A.·.M.·. Grand Hailing Sign of Distress, Osiris Slain} completing circumambulation of the Sun.
Recite.·. Rise up and remember Nosferatu Recall the Promise once stain'd in blood on the Cross at Gol’goatha. Dying you are forgotten of death, rising you are poisoned by the deeds of Kaayin the Murderer. Nosferatu remember and receive the Body of Christ {give Sign of Cross}. Nosferatu remember and receive the Body of Christ {give Sign of Cross}. The Body of Flesh is cleansed and anointed. Go forth in mine own Chosen Body, the Temple of Yeheshvah Redeemer. Crown'd am I with thorns about the Horns of Judah. There is no part of me that is not I.
My Hair is of the thorns that crucify, scourge and bless: the Sheaves of the Harvest and the Serpents of Fear; the Blood of the Shepherds, of Flower and Leaf;
the Crown of the Lamb, the Threads that join the Stars, fair as the hair of the Queen of Sheba and fine as the Spider's web. My Face is the Sun and the Waning of the Moon, the Magdalene’s tears and the Black Mirror of the Depths: Masks beyond Number concealing the Face of I, Nosferat! My Skull is the Conclave of the White Eagle; mine is the Blessing, mine is the Curse. For I am the Voice of the Oracle Nosferat. My Eyes are the Twin Shewstones of Twilight, the Dawn and the Dusk. Bright as the Star of Morning, bright as the Star of Evening.
Unto Nosferat is the Offering: the sacrifice of Virginity the abeyance of chastity.
the Rhythms of Lust and the Words of the Black Madonna, the Voice of the Old Nosferatu, the Oracle of the Nosferatu. My Nose is the Guide of the Great Hunt,
Keen as that of the Stag and the hound. Unto Nosferat is the Offering: all Scents that madden and rouse the heart. My Mouth is the Sacrifice of the Red Serpent's Tongue, a bloodfeasting of Souls and a Receiving Grail. may I partake of the forbidden fruits sacrificed unto U-li-tu and Hivvah, incestuous Lilith and Eve. My Hands are the Shrines of Gol’goatha. My Skin is the Vestment of Sodom and Gomorrah. My Blood is the Ink of the Book of Nosferatu. My Shadow is the Twin.
Serpent and Nosferat am I, conjoined in their Shadows the Twin Serpent Image of the Methuselah and antediluvian Nosferat. Nosophoros. Necurat. Nesuferit.
from the great blackness came I forth ere the blackness of Nod
i - describe a circle about the crown of the head {thumb between index & medius}
ii - thumb between index & medius {as before}, describe cross in the form of an 'X' upon the brow
iii - as before, describe cross in the form of an 'X' upon the left temple
iv - as before, describe cross in the form of an 'X' upon the right temple
v - as before, describe cross in the form of an 'X' upon the left breast
vi - as before, describe cross in the form of an 'X' upon the right breast
vii - as before, describe cross in the form of an 'X' upon the genital
Recite.·. Hekas Hekas Este Bebeloi.
Zazas Zazas Nasatanada Zazas.
Proto Eos Mii.
{Be ye far from Here all ye profane.
Ye Gates of the Hidden One be Open.
For I am Witness to the Dawn of my own Light.}
Zazas, Zazas, Nasatanada Zazas
Zrozo Zoas Hekau Zrazza
Sabai infernum
Evoi Sabai.
Akherra Goiti. Akherra Beiti.
AI Zabbat -1.
Ia Apethiui.
Ai Ononshu.
Al Zabbat -1.
Hekas Hekas Este Bebeloi.
Formulate the Qlifotic Cross.·.
Touch the brow and recite Ateh She’ol {thou art hell}
Touch the breast and recite Ge’hinnom {and the depths of the earth}
Touch thy left shoulder and recite ve-Tzelmoth {the shadow of death}
Touch thy right shoulder and recite ve-Shaari Moth {the gates of death}
Touch thy genital and recite Edom {place of sin}
Place the palms of the hands together upon thy chest, and in malediction recite
Le-olam Bar Shasketh {pit of destruction}
Face the location of the Moon and recite
before me Samæl behind me Thaumiel at my right hand Satoriel at my left hand Gamaliel
Recite.·.
I am light, and I am shadow, and I am that which is beyond them.
I am speech, and I am silence, and I am that which is beyond them.
I am death, and I am resurrection, and I am that which is beyond them.
I am love, and I am lust, and I am that which is beyond them.
I am sacrifice, and I am pain and I am that which is beyond them.
Yet by none of these mankind lusts. Yet by each of them must mankind lust and know me
Genuflect sevenfold make sign of the cross hold right hand over heart and recite:
This is the blood of Zion, I Nosferat eateth up the blood of Judah. My blood is the blood shed by Christ Jesus. This is the blood of the Saints, the blood of the Martyrs, the blood of the Presbyters; I am the Mystery of the Eucharist and I am the Red Death of Nosferatu, and I am the reconciler between them.
Take up fresh grave soil from thine altar and place upon the floor of the chamber of the rite, or upon the earth if amidst, in the West. Kneel thou before the grave soul. Run thy hands and fingers betwixt the grave soil, allow the essence of such hallowed ground to immolate thy body. Anoint if thy will, the body with the sacred grave soil, give Sign of Harpocrates {Sign of Silence}. Take up flail, scourge, or instrument to draw blood. Cut, the flesh, to allow the blood to seep upon the grave soil. Perceive the entry into the psyche burning spheres of deep crimson, bring thyself to a dark flash of ecstasy and gnosis of the Cross and Grail, of Christ and the Magdalene’s suffering experiencing apotheosis. Behold with thine æthereal clairvoyance the deep crimson hue of ruddy Crosses about the chamber of the rite, or amidst thine bestial venue. Experience the arousing sensations of blood rushing throughout your body; hear its resounding echo course amidst the confines of the flesh. Envision a great crimson Shadow enflamed with carnal energy in front of you, engulf your entire perception of being into this shadow. It is hellish and haunting, seductive and erotic, thrilling every drop of your blood into ecstatic frenzy. Merge yourself and faculties with the Shadow you have evoked before you, engulf the essence of your blood into its black and haunting formlessness. Experience and smell the sensations of your blood uniting with the essence of yourself as a new entity. There is only this experience, you are of the nature of this Shadow. Visualize your body a formless Shadow of great blackness, enflamed with the sounds of the rushing of the blood, seething between flesh and bone.
With a countenance of respect, release and take up the living spider from the altar. Release the living spider upon the fresh grave soil to roam in the chamber of the Rite. The spider is love and life, honor and repose, the mystery of the lie of death. In knowing the silence and cunning of the spider, let the Night of the Nosferatu fall upon thee, and the Veil of Fatal Light hideth that which is Not.
Circumambulate thrice widdershins, tracing the Ourobouris around thee; give Sign of the Cross with your hand upon each passing of the West. Return to center of the chamber. Genuflect and exit.