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==Abney Park Cemetery in [[Three Men and...Stories]]== |
==Abney Park Cemetery in [[Three Men and...Stories]]== |
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+ | One night inn the late 19th century, [[Vampire (Three Men)|vampire]]-hunter Professor [[Abraham Van Helsing (Three Men)|Abraham van Helsing]] led [[Jerome (Three Men)|J.]], [[George (Three Men)|George]], and [[Harris (Three Men)|Harris]], to say nothing of J.'s dog [[Montmorency (Three Men)|Montmorency]], to '''Abney Park Cemetery''' to confront a vampire.<ref>''Some Time Later: Fantastic Voyages Through Alternate Worlds,'' pgs. 13-17, TPB.</ref> |
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− | In the late 19th century, '''Abney Park Cemetery''' was a hotbed of [[vampire (Three Men)|vampirism]]. |
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+ | Not long after they entered the cemetery, Montmorency slipped his leash with a snarl and ran off into the darkness. The group heard a screech, and the dog returned to the group. However, under van Helsing's Döbereiner's lamp, the group found a dead man, naked, his throat torn out. Van Helsing explained that the man, whom he identified by the name [[Stivvings (Three Men)|Stivvings]], had been in a [[rat]] form, a step on the path to vampirism, when Montmorency dispatched him. Van Helsing urged them on.<ref>Ibid., pgs. 20-22.</ref> |
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+ | After stalking the cemetery furth, the group finally came upon van Helsing's [[Unnamed Vampire (Three Men)|quarry]], a particularly terrifying vampire. When it lunged at van Helsing, he shot it with a water pistol full of holy water, causing it intense pain. At Van Helsing's urging the group tackled the vampire; the three men held it while van Helsing stabbed it with a stiletto until he finally pierced its heart and it vanished in a puff of ashes and dust.<ref>Ibid. pgs. 22-24.</ref> |
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+ | ==References== |
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+ | {{Reflist}} |
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+ | {{Three Men and...Stories}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
Revision as of 18:11, 16 December 2017
Abney Park Cemetery is one of the Magnificent Seven cemeteries in London, England, United Kingdom.
Abney Park in Stoke Newington, in the London Borough of Hackney, is a historic parkland originally laid out in the early 18th century by Lady Mary Abney and Dr. Isaac Watts, and the neighbouring Hartopp family.
In 1840 it became a non-denominational garden cemetery, a semi-public park arboretum, and an educational institute, which was widely celebrated as an example of its time. A total of 196,843 burials had taken place there up to the year 2000. It is a Local Nature Reserve.
Abney Park Cemetery in Three Men and...Stories
One night inn the late 19th century, vampire-hunter Professor Abraham van Helsing led J., George, and Harris, to say nothing of J.'s dog Montmorency, to Abney Park Cemetery to confront a vampire.[1]
Not long after they entered the cemetery, Montmorency slipped his leash with a snarl and ran off into the darkness. The group heard a screech, and the dog returned to the group. However, under van Helsing's Döbereiner's lamp, the group found a dead man, naked, his throat torn out. Van Helsing explained that the man, whom he identified by the name Stivvings, had been in a rat form, a step on the path to vampirism, when Montmorency dispatched him. Van Helsing urged them on.[2]
After stalking the cemetery furth, the group finally came upon van Helsing's quarry, a particularly terrifying vampire. When it lunged at van Helsing, he shot it with a water pistol full of holy water, causing it intense pain. At Van Helsing's urging the group tackled the vampire; the three men held it while van Helsing stabbed it with a stiletto until he finally pierced its heart and it vanished in a puff of ashes and dust.[3]
References
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References
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