Herein, what do we know about Dracula?
What we do know from Stoker's working notes is that he read a book titled An Account of the Principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia by William Wilkinson. While reading this book, Stoker changed the vampire's name from Count Wampyr to Dracula, copying from a footnote: “DRACULA in Wallachian language means DEVIL.”
Furthermore, what does Dracula symbolize? Throughout the novel there is a sense that Dracula, with his ability to pass through keyholes like a mist and his affinity with bats, rats and wolves, represents the inexplicable; an alien force which science on its own cannot defeat.
Then, what is the message of Dracula?
One of the messages or themes of Dracula is the conflict between modernity and the ancient world. Stoker suggests that no matter how advanced the modern world's technology is, there are some things, such as evil, that it cannot destroy.
Is Dracula smart?
Since becoming a vampire, he's lost some of his intellectual skills and hasn't learned a whole lot. And being smart in the Middle Ages doesn't put you much ahead of the curve in 1897. Nobody told Dracula the ol' "use it or lose it" rule at least according to Van Helsing's narrow definition of intelligence.