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Fyodor Dostoyevsky // Alanis Morissette
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Pre-Dracula Vampire Literature Masterpost Part I: pre-1880s - 1849
Before 1800
“Der Vampir” (“The Vampire”)by Heinrich August Ossenfelder (1748) [Vampires.com] [University of Victoria - German]
“Lenore” by Gottfried August Bürger (1773) [GoogleBooks - Multiple Translations] [University of Tampa - Multiple Translations] (not explicitly about vampires, although it does concern the re-arisen dead)
“The Bride of Corinth” by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1797) [GoogleBooks] [Project Gutenberg] [Wikisource]
“The Old Woman of Berkeley” by Robert Southey (1798) [GoogleBooks] [Famouspoetsandpoems.com] (not explicitly about vampires, although it does concern the re-arisen dead)
1800-1819
“Wake Not the Dead"attributed to Johann Ludwig Tieck (1800) [Project Gutenberg] [SFF.net]
Thalaba the Destroyerby Robert Southey (1801) [GoogleBooks: Vol 1. | Vol. 2] [Project Gutenberg]
“The Vampire” by John Stagg, in his Minstrel of the North (1810) [GoogleBooks] [Archive,org] [The Literary Gothic]
The Giaour by George Gordon Byron (1813) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org] [Polish Online Literature Library] [The Literary Gothic - Excerpt]
“A Fragment of a Novel” (aka “The Burial: A Fragment”) by George Gordon Byron (1816) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org] [Project Gutenberg] [SFF.net]
“Christabel” by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1816) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org] [Project Gutenberg] [Erudit.org] (not explicitly about vampires)
“The Vampyre” by John Polidori (1819) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org] [Project Gutenberg] [SFF.net]
1820-1830
“La Belle Dame Sans Merci” by John Keats (1820) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org] [Poetryfoundation.org] (not explicitly about vampires) 
“Lamia” by John Keats (1820) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org] [Bartleby.com] (not explicitly about vampires)
Lord Ruthven ou les Vampires (Lord Ruthven or The Vampires) by Cyprien Berard (1820) [Archive.org - French] [Black Coat Press - English Translation ($)]
The Vampire, or The Bride of the Isles by  J. R. Planché (1820) [The Literary Gothic]
Le Vampire (The Vampire) by Charles Nodier (1820) [Munseys - PDF]
“Vampirisimus” by E.T.A. Hoffman (1821), from his Die Erzählungen der Serapionsbrüder (The Serapion Brethren) [GoogleBooks] [Project Gutenburg] [National University of Central Buenos Aires - Spanish]
Smarra ou les Demons de la Nuit (Smarra, or the Night of the Demons) by Charles Nodier (1821) [Archive.org - French] [Project Gutenberg - French] [Rilune.org - French] [Amazon.com - English Translation ($)]
Han d’Islande (Hans of Iceland) by Victor Hugo (1821) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org: Vol. I | Vol. 2] (not explicitly about vampires, although a major character drinks blood for the sake of revenge)
La Vampire Ou La Vierge De Hongrie (The Vampire or The Hungarian Virgin)  by Étienne-Léon de Lamothe-Langon (1825) [Gallica.bnf.fr: Vol. 1 | Vol. 2 | Vol. 3 - French] [Black Coat Press - English Translation ($)]
Der Vampyre und seine Braut (The Vampire and his Bride) by Carl Spindler (1826) [GoogleBooks - German] [Bibliotheque-vampires.de - German]
La Guzla, ou Choix de Poesies Illyrique (The Guzla, or a Selection of Illyric Poems) by Prosper Merimee (1827) [GoogleBooks - French] [Archive.org - French] (A literary hoax that purports to be a collection of folklore)
Der Vampyr (The Vampire) by Heinrich Marschner and Wilhelm August Wohlbrück (1828) [Stanford University - Libretto] [Archive.org - German Score] [Archive.org -  German Recording] [Zeno.org - German Libretto]
Der Vampyre, oder die Totenbraut (The Vampyre and the Dead Bride) by Theodor Hildebrand (1828) [GoogleBooks - German]
1830-1839
“The Eve of Ivan Kupala” (aka “St. John’s Eve”]by Nikolaj Vasilevic Gogol (1832), from his Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka  [The University of Adelaide]
“The Vampire Bride” by Henry Thomas Liddell (1833) [GoogleBooks]
“The Viy” by Nikolaj Vasilevic Gogol (1835), from his Mirgorod [The University of Adelaide]
“La Morte Amoureuse” (“The Dead Lover,” aka “Clarimonde”; “The Beautiful Vampire”; “The Dead Woman in Love”; “The Dead Leman”) by Théophile Gautier (1836) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org] [Project Gutenberg] [Université du Québec à Chicoutimi - French]
“Ligea” by Edgar Allan Poe (1838) [GoogleBooks] [Project Gutenberg] [Poestories.com] (not explicitly about vampires, although it does concern the re-arisen dead)
Sem’ya Vurdalaka (The Family of the Voursalak) by Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy (1839) [Az.lib.eu - Russian] [Amazon.com - English Translation ($)]
1840-1849
Der tote Gast (The Dead Guest) by Heinrich Zschokke (1840) [GoogleBooks]
Upyr (The Vampire) by Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy (1841) [Az.lib.eu - Russian] [Amazon.com - English Translation ($)]
‘The Vampire” by James Clerk Maxwell (1845) [GoogleBooks] [Poemhunter.com]
Varney the Vampyre, or, The Feast of Blood by James Malcolm Rhymer (sometimes attributed to Thomas Preskett Prest) (1845-1847) [University of Virgina] [Project Gutenberg - Incomplete]
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte (1847) [GoogleBooks] [Archive.org] [Project Gutenberg] (not explicitly about vampires, although Heathcliff is accused of vampirsm)
“La Dame pâle” (“The Pale Lady,” aka “The Carpathian Mountains”; “The Vampire of the Carpathian Mountains”) by Alexandre Dumas and Paul Bobage, in Les mille et un fantômes (The Thousand and One Ghosts) (1849) [Project Gutenberg - French] [Wikisource - French] [Amazon.com - English Translation ($)]
Adapted from this forum post. Original poster has not read all works listed, but has applied descriptive/helpful notes where possible.
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Damn shawty, your haunting eyes, unique nose and janky teeth have bewitched my mind, body and soul.
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Source details and larger version.
They’ve had many lives and many ages: cats I’ve met in my time travels.
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Bloody Coffin Bath Bomb; {Credit}
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“My fangs are now slivered, but people forget, I am still a serpent, and my poison, still emphatically internecine, veritably murderous.”
— Channing H.M (via de-morte)
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I want to be what you are, see what you see, love what you love.
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so sick and twisted that vampires aren’t real because if vampires were real I wouldn’t have any more problems. mostly because I would be having gay vampire sex all night. and sleeping during the day. because id be a vampire.
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DRACULA (1931) dir. Tod Browning, Karl Freund
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oh to have blood covered lips and teeth
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Everyone shut up and look at this dog dressed like pinhead from Hellraiser
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