preview

How Does Lucy Westenra Change In Dracula

Decent Essays

The Use of Lucy Westenra to Convey Author’s Meaning
Lucy Westenra is presented to us by Bram Stoker in his novel Dracula as a very two dimensional character; however, Stoker uses her character as a beacon to convey the true, deeper threat that Dracula poses to society through three distinct stages being Lucy’s engagement, Lucy’s transformation, and the resulting Bloofer Lady. Lucy’s engagement and the proposals surrounding it establish her character as a standard, clear cut Victorian woman dismissive of any unfashionable thoughts. The later unfortunate transformation to vampirism displays impurities bubbling to the surface, with the subsequent Bloofer Lady displaying full force how damaging these impurities bestowed by Dracula are damaging …show more content…

Before the final transition, she “whispered softly, ‘Arthur! Oh, my love, I am so glad you have come!’” (Stoker 229) in a final display of the good wife and lover she was before Dracula’s corruption. Once Lucy’s eyes closed there was a “strange change which [Seward] had noticed in the night” (Stoker 230). When Lucy’s eyes opened to be “dull and hard” (Stoker 230), the audience is alerted to an evil nature. Yet nothing is more forewarning of corruptness than when she uses a “soft, voluptuous voice” in an attempt to seduce her husband with the same line but distinguished by a dangerously flirtatious “Kiss me!” (Stoker 230). This is highly uncharacteristic of the pure Victorian woman that had been associated with Lucy by the audience. Sensing a new danger, Van Helsing motions Holmwood away from this action. A possible mirror of Stoker warning the audience that Lucy’s final act of seduction was unnatural, unnerving, and simply an evil that must be kept away from Victorian …show more content…

Our protagonists meet the Bloofer Lady only to see that Lucy goes from being full of “purity to voluptuous wantonness” (Stoker 301). A display of wicked sexual actions previously highlighted before her transition and has been highlighted in several other portions of the novel. Our prominent female protagonist, Mina Murray, was sexually humiliated by have her face pressed to Dracula’s chest (Stoker 408) - a continuation of the viral infection corrupting those who interact with Dracula. Lucy has not only become corrupt sexually, the Bloofer Lady displays a twisted and upside-down motherhood. Her new role in the Cult of Domesticity as a wife meant that she was eventually to be a mother who cares for her child. Stoker has illustrated the Bloofer Lady to do exactly the opposite, flinging to the ground a “child that up to now she had clutched strenuously to her breast, growling over it as a dog growls over a bone” (Stoker 302). An action very demonstrative of the evil being that now takes her place and that the motherhood within her has been inverted. A caring mother feeds a child, yet this evil mother feeds on it. With Lucy’s motherhood destroyed, purity corrupted, and gorgeousness vanished, she remains an evil horror that Stoker implies is the future of Victorian Society should our protagonists not succeed.

Get Access