Title Card - U.K. Version (1.66:1 Aspect Ratio) |
Title Card - U.S. Version (1.85:1 Aspect Ratio) |
00:39 – Note how
“Dracula” is in a very ornate typeface. By contrast, “Horror
of Dracula” is in the same typeface as the rest of the credits.
00:59 – The
opening credits are shown against an image of an eagle, hawk, condor,
vulture or some other kind of bird of prey. Then the camera rotates
around that bird, which is a decorative feature outside Dracula’s
castle. Clearly the symbolism here is that the master of this castle
is also a predator.
01:48 - For a huge
castle, Dracula sure did pick a great hiding place. His coffin is
located in a crypt entered via a door just to the right of the front
door.
01:55 – This is
the only time we see the lid on this coffin. But how does Dracula
open that coffin, is he strong enough to lift the capping stone from
a prone position. Also, how does he move it so it does not fall off
and break on the stone floor?
02:08 – The blood
splattered over Dracula’s name on his coffin suggests that he
brought a victim to his crypt and then had his way with the victim.
02:22 - The Diary of
Jonathan Hacker begins on May 3, 1885. This date will become very
significant as we progress through the film.
03:45 - Dracula
cares so little about security that he doesn’t even bother to lock
the outside door. He could have arranged to give Harker a key to his
castle. The moment Harker opens the door his environment turns
surprisingly opulent.
Bon Appetit |
05:12 - When Harker
arrives at Castle Dracula, it is still light out. Food has been
prepared for him. How long has this food been here? Harker makes a
facial gesture that shows he is pleasantly surprised at the fare.
How does the aristocratic Dracula prepare this meal? Meals are
prepared by servants to the aristocracy. In the book and all these
movies, despite living in a secluded castle not close to a town and
which the locals fear, Dracula always seems to have no difficulty
procuring high-quality meals for his guests. Who cooks them and
where? How is meat and fruit delivered? Is there a working oven to
bake bread? The film “Shadow of the Vampire” actually raises
this question as well in a slightly different way.
05:20 – Dracula’s
family motto is “Fidelis et mortem”, faithful unto death. This
indicates Count Dracula’s family is “nobility of the sword”
rather than “nobility of the robe.”
07:23 - When the
woman comes to Harker, she leaves in a hurry because Dracula can see
them. Dracula does not mention her at all, not even to give an excuse
that she is his ward and mentally ill. Harker, posing as a
scholarly, respectable librarian, does not think to ask his host
about the mysterious woman. The woman made certain accusations of
his host that any respectable Victorian gentleman would feel honor
bound to address. That Harker does not may have brought some
suspicion on him.
08:14 - Dracula
refers to his housekeeper being away, and his huge castle is
remarkably kept clean. That must be an energetic housekeeper! As
this is an excuse, who does clean the castle? Is that and the need
to serve up an occasional meal the reasons why he keeps the woman
around?
08:52 - Why does
Dracula hire a librarian? In the novel he brings Harker to his
Castle to finalize a land purchase in England so he can move and feed
on fresh blood. In the novel Harker serves a definitive purpose to
Dracula’s plans, Dracula cannot just move in somewhere as a trespasser and
expect any security.
09:25 - This Dracula
does not seem to have any desire to feed on Harker initially, the
charade of the dignified host would have been unnecessary if Harker
was merely brought there as a meal. With his treacherous, hungry
woman around, how can he expect that this librarian would live to
complete his task? Moreover, if the librarian disappeared, his
friends and family would likely make inquiries in Castle Dracula’s
direction. Is Dracula so arrogant or so thoughtless? I would suggest
that Dracula, being immortal, wishes to pass the time in seclusion at
his Castle, and therefore the library is his sole means of
entertainment. So the librarian does offer something for Dracula, especially
with works and languages with which Dracula is unfamiliar.
09:53 - Dracula
gives Harker a key to the library, apparently that one of only
possibly two doors in this castle that has one.
10:33 - Christopher
Lee’s dialog burden ends for this film after he leaves Harker for
the second time. At least he gets some this time, in his previous
Hammer film appearance, Curse of Frankenstein, he had none. Harker
is the only person he is shown speaking to during the entire film.
Even so, he has more dialog in this film than the next two or three
Hammer Draculas he made. Not until Scars of Dracula does he try to
speak to another person in a fairly normal manner.
11:05 - The trouble
with diaries is that they can be found and read by others. In this
short narration, the break with tradition is complete. No longer is
Harker some hapless real estate agent whom Dracula selected out of
many to bring him to England, Harker here is a full-fledged vampire
hunter. He is so confident of his success that he brings a
photograph of his fiancee and tells Dracula her true name. By this
time, many audience members would have been familiar with the story
either by reading the book or watching the Lugosi film. The
producers of the film would not have been faulted for needing to
change the story to play with audience expectations.
12:44 - Then in the
very next scene, his door having been mysteriously opened in the
middle of the night, what does Harker do? If he was to keep his
cover, he should have not left his room, knowing how dangerous
Dracula is and that Dracula locked him in his room.
Domestic Violence |
14:06 - “Is it not
reason enough that he locks me up in his house, holds me against my
will?” The first half of this statement should have drawn Harker’s
suspicions immediately, because almost nothing in the house is locked
up and this woman seems to come and go as she pleases. Still, the
woman is successful in tricking Harker into sympathy and letting his
guard down.
15:00 - There may
have been a longer take of this bite, one contemporary newspaper
article describes blood gushing into the camera, and this bite is the
best one to feature that kind of effect. Japanese audiences may have
seen that in their more extended cut.
15:26 – The woman
wears a fashionable pair of high-heels, in the previous scene she
wore sandals.
17:25 - After the
fight with the woman and Harker, why would Dracula keep Harker alive,
or at the very least not locked up in a dungeon cell? The way Harker
exits his room suggests it is on the ground floor, yet we saw Harker
and Dracula ascend two flights of stairs earlier. Wherever it may
be, it has two windows that are not barred, so locking him in is no
sure way to secure him until the evening.
20:00 - Why is there
a Christian icon so close to Castle Dracula? Would Dracula permit
such symbols to be so close to his lair? If he does, that suggests
that Castle Dracula is not quite the figure of fear it is usually
portrayed because someone must have put those flowers and that statue
of Mary and Baby Jesus there. The area is later referred to as the
crossroads, so it does suggest that travel does occur there.
20:38 - Harker is
able to locate Dracula’s resting place with incredible ease. He
knows he does not have much time, so who does he decide to stake
first? The vampire he pushed off or the vampire who knocked him out?
Harker is the most inept vampire hunter we have seen in a movie up
to this time.
21:10 - We can
clearly see the woman’s chest heave as she breathes. I guess we
know why she was hired. Vampires are supposed to appear as dead
during the day, but she must be close to waking. Maybe Harker should
have taken that as a hint to turn his attention elsewhere. Strangely
she seems to be smiling despite having enraged and presumably been
punished by her master.
22:03 - After the
woman is staked, her face is shown in extreme old age. This suggests
what her true age would have been. If she was bitten when she was in
her youth, she must have lived with Dracula for decades. Would
Dracula have really kept such a woman around for so long?
Harker suddenly hoped his life insurance policy was paid up |
22:05 - While Harker
is bending over the tomb after staking the woman, Dracula has to rise
from his coffin, walk behind Harker and go up the stairs before he
reappears to close the door. Wouldn’t it have just been easier to
grab him from behind? Is there more than one way out of this tomb?
22:54 - When Dracula
closes the door, there has been some speculation that there was more
footage shot showing Dracula kill Harker instead of the implication
through the fade to black. However, I am not convinced that such
footage would have been shot, it would have added nothing to the film
except violence for its own sake when there was already plenty of it.
23:16 - I think the
peasants must get used to the smell of garlic after a while. With
gas lamps and a music box (the 19th century equivalent of a juke
box), this tavern seems to be pretty well off.
24:33 - Hammer did
like to cast attractive actresses even in small parts.
25:27 - The
Innkeeper is pretty terrible at trying to avert the suspicions of his
guest.
26:05 - Klausenburg
is the German name of the city of Cluj-Napoca, which was within
Transylvania and within modern-day Romania. Dracula’s Castle is
located in Transylvania in the book, but unless you had a solid
knowledge of Transylvanian geography, you might be mistaken for
thinking that Castle Dracula is located somewhere in Germany.
Headquarters of the Know-Nothing Party |
26:36 - The
Innkeeper’s servant-girl isn’t very discrete when she tells Dr.
Van Helsing about the book. The Innkeeper is clearly looking in her
direction and she didn’t make any real effort to communicate
without attracting attention. That sort of disobedience would have
probably earned her a beating in those times.
27:26 0 How does
Dracula make arrangements for a hearse driver to transport his
coffin? That hearse with its glass panels is awfully fancy. You
would think Dracula would want to travel with a low profile, not an
attractive white coffin. That kind of coach, traveling over lonely
country roads, practically has a “rob me” sign on it. Are these
roads free from thieves and bandits? Would they scruple to steal from the dead?
29:01 - Who
ransacked Harker’s room? Harker did not leave it in that condition
when he left it and he did not hide anything away. Dracula
presumably contacted Harker by post to arrange for his coming to act
as a librarian, so he knows where he lives. Plus he turned Harker
into a vampire, so Harker could have told him everything about his
fiance and Van Helsing. However, if Dracula felt he needed to leave in a
hurry, he may have done a rough search for any clues Harker may have
left behind regarding his intentions and his contacts.
29:52 - Apparently
Harker’s common sense does not improve after his turning into a
vampire, unless he was just turned and left in the crypt. Not only does he use the same
easily-found resting place that Dracula used, he leaves a stake and
hammer on the ground in the room.
It is highly
unlikely that Harker would have been left alive after his killing of
Dracula’s woman. Dracula probably would have turned him
immediately. It will be established later that vampires turn from
dead to undead within a day or so of their deaths. Harker should
have been established as a thinking vampire unless Van Helsing was
only two days behind him. That wouldn’t have given Dracula much
time to make arrangements.
30:20 - When Van
Helsing grabs the stake and walks to Harker’s coffin, the screen
fades to black. There has been speculation that the scene of Van
Helsing staking Harker was cut. While the censors may have felt the
need to trim excessive violence, there was no need for another
staking within five minutes of the last one. Harker’s fate was
sealed and the audience already knew how it was to happen.
30:54 - No man is
good at averting suspicion in this movie. If Van Helsing wanted to
avoid rousing his host's suspicions, he should have made something up that was more convincing than "Jonathan Harker is dead and I cannot tell you where or how he died." Despite the torn photograph he found in Harker’s room, Van Helsing
does not suspect that Dracula is looking for revenge at this point.
The women in this film are much more successful in their efforts at
deceit.
Appointment with the Vampire |
34:40 - Van Helsing
records his notes on a phonograph. This movie is set in 1885 and the
phonograph was invented by Thomas Edison in 1877. At first it is
plausible that a man of science like Van Helsing could have been an
early adopter of the device. However, he appears to have been using
a conventional Graphophone which used wax cylinders, not Edison’s
earlier phonograph which used tin-foil cylinders. The invention of
wax cylinders, which really allowed public the ability to record to
cylinder, was not patented until 1886. The use of the Graphophone in
this film is almost certainly an anachronism, and it may not be the
last.
This scene with the
Graphophone is essentially teaching the audience the “vampire
rules” for this film, which is repeated in every retelling of the
story in some way or form. Back in 1958, it could not be assumed
that the audience would be well-versed in the strengths and weaknesses of
a vampire. All the weaknesses mentioned in this movie, garlic, stake
& hammer, sunlight, will be employed later in the film. Other
common vampire myths, like not being able to cast a reflection in a
mirror, are not used.
35:49 - “I was
talking to myself” This part of the scene is one of the few
comedic moments in this film. However, in the real world, wouldn’t
the Doctor have explained that he was using a new invention to record
his voice to avoid his servant thinking that his employer is not
quite right? Or does Van Helsing like to encourage an air of mystery
about himself?
The Cheap-man's Stenographer |
36:57 - Van Helsing
refers to vampirism as a disease like drug addiction, but as it is a
disease which offers immortality, many people would no doubt want to
acquire it. However, it behaves like a disease until death, where
the victim looks forward to another visit from the vampire. This
explains why the women in this film invite Dracula into their bedrooms.
In other words the victims are addicts and the vampire is their
dealer. The next scene will illustrate this. However, after death,
vampire is no longer a disease but the only means of existence open
to the vampire. The victim has now become the dealer.
40:27 - Mina tells
Van Helsing that Lucy’s illness happened about 10 days ago.
Apparently Dracula wasted no time in finding not just a victim but
the object of his revenge.
40:40 - Mina makes
it sound like she needed Dr. Seward’s permission to get a second
opinion. One cannot imagine an enlightened society where the treating physician
hold a veto power over whether the patient may consult with another
doctor.
40:57 - Despite Dr.
Van Helsing being Harker’s most intimate friend and colleague, he
has never met his fiancee before.
When I point, I mean business! |
44:30 - Dr. Van
Helsing was quite clear, “If you don’t [follow my instructions
exactly] she will die.” Apparently Mina did not relay his
instructions to her servant Gerda in so blunt a manner, or Gerda is
very weak-willed.
46:40 - Despite his
grief, it becomes Arthur’s turn to act stupid. First his servant
tells him that she may caused his sister’s death by disobeying his
wife’s instructions and she is not sacked on the spot. Then he
blames Van Helsing for his troubles when his sister would have died
had Van Helsing’s instructions never been given.
Why doesn't anyone listen to the finger? |
48:16 - Tania is
Gerda’s child, although at first point the relationship is only
implied. As the child was not in trouble, why would Gerda have
introduced the policeman and her troubles to the Holmwoods? It would
seem likely that Gerda had been widowed after giving birth to her
child. Having no means of support for herself and her baby, she
would have had to go into service and most likely given the baby up.
However, the childless Holmwoods took them both in and appear to have
a special affection for Tania. One could go deeper and suggest that
the Holmwoods marriage is loving but platonic or that Mina is barren
and her husband does not believe in sex except for procreation.
Either suggestion might explain why Mina may be especially receptive
to Dracula’s hypnotic stare. Similarly, Jonathan Harker didn’t
seem the Byronic lover-type, so the same may be said for Lucy.
49:56 - Does no one
lock up their tombs or even put slabs over a coffin? Were open
burials common in the 19th century?
Graveyards are a great place to play "Ring Around the Posey" |
52:20 - Lucy runs
into the crypt even though she knows she would be trapped and at the
mercy of Van Helsing, but she has few options at this point with dawn practically on the horizons. Arthur runs into the crypt without the
protection of a crucifix.
55:28 - When Van
Helsing stakes Lucy, the scene was less violent in versions of the
film released prior to 2007. When the BFI did their 2007 restoration
of the film, they found shots from a 16mm print which had been
excised from theatrical prints and inserted them. Previous DVD
releases from Warner Bros. had the censored scene included, the 2013
Region 2/B Blu-Ray/DVD from Lionsgate is the first to home video
release in a digital format to include it. It can also be seen in
the 2018 Warner Bros. Archives Blu-ray.
Dracula (1958) - Now with Extra Blood™ |
56:29 - When Arthur
sees Lucy, he only sees the beautiful face of his sister at peace
without the crucifix scar. She still has a bloody stake through her
heart.
57:08 - Given the
shortsightedness of what Dracula does in this film, its rather
improbable that he has survived for five to six hundred years.
57:26 - This movie
definitely establishes that in the Hammer Universe, Dracula cannot
transform into a bat, a wolf, mist or anything else. Other than long
life, great strength and hypnotic powers, he does not seem to possess
any other supernatural abilities. In later films he will gain the
power to resurrect himself by having blood spilled over his ashes and
the ability to command bats to do his bidding. They tried the
transformation thing with one Dracula’s disciples in Brides of
Dracula, but the bat prop didn’t measure up and doubtless they
decided to back to a two-legs only vampire.
58:41 - Van Helsing
refers to the border crossing at “Ingstadt”. It appears to be a
made-up name, because while there are real place names for Igstadt
and Inglostadt, both hundreds of miles to the east of Clausenberg.
“Ingstadt” does not exist in real life.
59:41 - Mina speaks
to the young man and it is implied that Dracula gave the man a
message to give to her. This shows that Dracula has not lost the
ability to communicate normally, although his appearances in this
film since the woman attacked Harker have all been predatory and he
has been limited to snarling.
Breaking the Law for the Greater Good |
1:00:10 - The second
comedic moment in the film with the border officer is handled more
naturally or subtly than the first.
1:00:38 - On
December 1, the coffin traveled from Clausenberg to Karlstadt. Now
there are two Karlstadts the film could be referring to. The first
is Karlstadt am Main, which is in Bavaria, south-central Germany.
The second is what is today known as Karlovac, a city in central
Croatia.
But let us look to
the time frame of this film. Harker arrives at Castle Dracula on May
3. By May 4 he is turned undead. On December 1, Dracula flies
from his Castle and Van Helsing puts Harker to rest. Dracula begins
to attack Lucy on or about December 2. Van Helsing meets the
Holmwoods to inform them of Harker’s death on December 11. Mina
goes to Van Helsing the next day and by the morning of the following
day Lucy is dead. About three days later Van Helsing stakes Lucy.
The men go to Igstadt the next evening and Dracula attacks Mina. So
it appears that Van Helsing took over six months to follow his friend
Harker to Clausenburg. However, the film makes it appear that Van
Helsing arrived the very next day after Harker’s death because
Harker still has blood on his throat from where the woman bit him.
He also has no blood on his mouth, so he has not fed yet. I think
screenplay writer Jimmy Sangster made a mistake here, the border
guard should have said May 4, not December 1.
1:02:30 - Successful
deception when Mina deceives Van Helsing and Arthur about her
whereabouts that morning.
Gallows Humor |
1:03:33 - The scene
with the undertaker is the penultimate moment of comedy in this film.
The actor who plays the undertaker, Miles Malleson, will appear in
this film’s sequel Bride of Dracula, playing a similar but more
expanded comedic role. Peter Cushing will reprise his role in the
sequel as well, but like this film he will not appear immediately.
1:03:56 - Apparently
the undertaker was not sued over the old man who fell down the
morgue’s steps. I doubt he would have found that funny.
1:04:10 - The
coffin’s been so long it’s bound to be in the back. Given that
the coffin has been there for about two weeks, apparently undertaking
is a busy trade in Karlstadt.
Why are you trying to force your religious beliefs on me? |
1:07:47 - Arthur and
Van Helsing watch Mina’s room outside the house at night, but that
seems to be the extent of their plan. Arthur is armed only with a
small cross to protect himself.
British Dentistry at its Finest |
Dracula starts his seduction of Mina's eyebrows (Long-lost Japanese Cut footage) |
1:10:21 - Blood
transfusion in 1885 would have been a very risky endeavor, especially
with an individual already weak from blood loss. The body will
reject an incompatible blood group and blood groups were not
understood until 1901. It would definitely had been a procedure of
last resort. In the novel, Van Helsing’s last transfusion of Lucy, from Quincy Morris, proves incompatible.
Rolling the dice |
You may be a guest in this house, but this is an abuse of hospitality! |
1:15:05 - Van
Helsing slaps Gerda to get her to focus, but the foley artist
apparently thought a whip crack sound was appropriate.
1:16:14 - These
scenes with the border officer during the chase constitute the final
moments of intentional humor in this film. They could be argued that
this humor reduces the tension of the chase and climax, but they are brief.
1:17:04 - Van
Helsing and Arthur are only half an hour behind Dracula. While
Dracula cannot know that exactly, he knows the men will follow him.
Yet he goes into his castle, finds a shovel and digs a grave
intending to bury Mina alive. Presumably she will die and return as
a vampire as a result of this. Even at this point he does not try to
cut his losses and kill Mina quickly. He also digs a rather proper
hole despite his need for haste. Is that so she can have some native
soil in which to rest in her undead life?
It was established
previously that someone can travel from Dracula’s castle in
Clausenburg to Carlstadt in a day. A horse drawn carriage can
probably travel about 30 miles in a given day, assuming ideal
conditions of horse, road, driver, carriage, traffic and weather. So
Dracula has to make the journey totally by night. Given this is
December, that would given him some extra time of darkness, but he
has no more than fourteen hours before the outdoors becomes fatal to
him. So why did it take Van Helsing to take over six months to make
the journey to check on his friend’s progress?
The geography in
this film is hopeless. There is at least four hundred of miles
between Cluj-Napoca/Clausenburg and Karlovac/Karlsbad in real life.
There is absolutely no way that you could travel between them by
horse in an evening, it would take weeks by horse. Igstadt hundreds
of miles east of Karlovac/Karlsbad. There was no budget to depict
sea voyages, so you get Dracula living practically in the heroes' back
yard by modern standards. Clearly the screenwriter took random
German place names and assigned them according to his whim.
Van Helsing is not just comfortable with where this is going |
Dracula’s
on-screen violence ends where it begins, in the library in which
Harker was to catalog Dracula’s books. The only difference
between then and now is the daylight, which is why Van Helsing
prevailed where Harker failed.
Psoriasis is no joke (Long-lost Japanese Cut footage) |
1:26:26 - What
significance is there to the Zodiac Wheel? Dracula’s ring falls on
the Aquarius symbol and there is a Greek quotation on the inner
circle and a Latin quotation on the outer circle. Wikipedia tells us
this on the film’s page :
“The inner circle
in Greek has a quote from Homer's Odyssey Book 18.136–7: "τοῖος
γὰρ νόος ἐστὶν ἐπιχθονίων ἀνθρώπων
οἷον ἐπ᾽ ἦμαρ ἄγησι πατὴρ ἀνδρῶν
τε θεῶν τε" ("The mind of men who live on the
earth is such as the day the father of gods and men [Zeus] brings
upon them.") The outer wheel is written in Latin, and is a quote
from Hesiod via Bartolomeo Anglico (De proprietatibus rerum, Book 8,
Chapter 2): "Tellus vero primum siquidem genuit parem sibi
coelum stellis ornatum, ut ipsam totam obtegat, utque esset beatis
Diis sedes tuta semper." ("And Earth first bare starry
Heaven, equal to herself, to cover her on every side, and to be an
ever-sure abiding-place for the blessed gods.")”
Is there any hidden
meaning to this Zodiac Wheel? Is it not ironic that Dracula meets his
end on inscriptions and a sign that are essentially warnings to him?
Dracula has been thought to represent a creature or a danger from
superstitious times and a corrupt, uncivilized age. His behavior in
the film is savage and based purely on selfish need. He corrupts
pure and innocent maidens into wanton disciples of evil like himself.
The inner inscription may indicate that while he may be powerful
when people live in ignorance, when knowledge and reason come to them
he is no longer invincible. The outer inscription should have
reminded this arrogant creature, (for he shows much arrogance in the
film), that there is a higher and benign power. Remember that the
inner inscription implies that man’s knowledge comes from God, so
God may impart the knowledge in men to defeat evil. Nothing lasts
forever and Dracula’s hubris in thinking he can live forever,
especially in his savage ways, will eventually doom him.
"Dust in the wind...all we are is dust in the wind." |
The blowing away
part of the ending was surprisingly not retconned by Dracula, Prince
of Darkness. The ending to this film is replayed in that film,
complete with wind blowing away the ashes (but in a newly shot
sequence). In that film, Dracula’s ashes are transferred to a
coffin where his servant later revives the vampire with blood. If
ashes were blown away, how would the servant collect them?
I should REALLY buy the blu-ray.
ReplyDeleteGreat article.
ReplyDeleteNice review. However, it is incorrect to state that English Protestants never wore or used a cross as a symbol. Though it would be unlikely for a Church of England member to have a crucifix during this time, wearing a plain cross of the sort that Arthur gave Mina was not at all uncommon and there are many, many surviving Victorian examples from England. There are also many Church of England churches from that time and well before that are relatively ornate and full of crosses, crucifixes, fonts, etc. I think her do the expression upon seeing the cross was due to the fact that she was already tainted by Dracula, not to any objections to what would’ve been a very common religious symbol for her.
ReplyDeleteLucy likely would’ve been buried in a lead coffin surrounded by an outer wooden one, as she was in the book. The open stone sarcophagus look was likely a stylistic choice, which I think looks amazing but it’s definitely not true to life.
In the novel, when Harker is offered the crucifix from an old woman, he writes "I did not know what to do, for, as an English Churchman, I have been taught to regard such things as in some measure idolatrous, and yet it seemed so ungracious to refuse an old lady meaning so well and in such a state of mind." This passage suggests a diversity of views of the faithful within the Church of England toward the object of the crucifix, but I accept that the symbol itself would not be shunned at all times or for all purposes.
DeleteYes, At the time the Oxford movement was in full swing, where a lot of ritual aspects that had been stripped away after the Reformation were being added back in. Prior to that there was already a wide variation between “Low Church” and High Church beliefs and practices. Even so, even “Low Church” goers would have been used to seeing a cross in the sanctuary, and as I said there are many, many surviving Victorian examples of cross pendants worn by Protestants. I don’t think there was ever a time the Church of England “shunned” a simple cross. I always felt like Harker’s objection in the book was due to the fact that it was a crucifix (which would have been rare in the C of E) or possibly even a rosary, which is definitely something most English church members would have seen as superstitious.
DeleteThis seems a very sound conclusion. Non-Christians may find the differences between a cross, a crucifix and a rosary rather obscure.
Delete