Robert Louis Stevenson brings the possibility of another side of person to life in his tale of “strange Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.” He uses three narrators in the book to describe the tale of Dr. Jekyll, a respected, very “good” doctor who creates or as some would better describe it as bringing out the more Neolithic man in side him, in the form of Mr.
Hyde. The most puzzling part of the book is that the full details of the story are not revealed until the very end of the novel. Until we learn the ultimate truth from Dr. Jekyll’s confession, we try to decipher (along with the main characters) who Mr.
Hyde is… and how he relates to Dr. Jekyll. At the end of the book, we discover that Dr. Jekyll had explored for some time that there are two natures in him self. For many years, he has repressed the more man like side.
After lengthy thought, he came to the conclusion: “If each, I told myself, could but be housed in separate identities, life would be relieved of all that was unbearable.” Unfortunately, Dr. Jekyll could not have possibly anticipated what problems his separation from a punctual well-respected man, into a living catalyst would cause. The existence of an evil and a good soul in one body bring forward a whole host of problems. The “good”, in the form of Dr. Jekyll is soon overpowered by the “evil,” animal nature of Mr. Hyde “ape like furry.” Good and evil can no longer be clearly defined.
The Review on Of Mice and Men Book Report
In the book “Of Mice & Men” the two main characters are George and Lennie. The setting of the story seems to be set back in the early 1900’s or the late 1800’s by the dialect they use. The two characters have a unique relationship. The first character is a small quick man with strong features his name is George. The other man is very large with a shapeless face and is also quite slow his name ...
When Mr. Hyde commits a crime, Dr. Jekyll tries to make up for the evil, but the situation is obscure. The question we must ask ourselves is whether Dr. Jekyll isn’t just as much to blame as Mr. Hyde; or whether he is “innocent,” since he can’t control Mr.
Hyde’s actions. Dr. Jekyll’s possible innocent becomes more puzzling since the two identities are two halves of the same person… and it was Dr. Jekyll’s anxiety to pull a cover on his own life and become his own test gun epig by exploring the possibilities of his two in one theories that has produced these horrible results in the first place. As Stevenson explores the depths of human psychology and challenges central Christian beliefs, and Charles Darwin’s “the theory of evolution” we think about the fact we are all “Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde”, but due to our beliefs and aristocracy we have only been able to discover the Dr Jekyll inside us; we have been led to think that the Jekyll we have, is our good side but why not our adventurous? “Satan had once been the brightest and best of all the angles in heaven.” Maybe Hyde is challenging Jekyll because he is bored of staying on the inside, he might feel that is potential is better severed out side where he can feel alive.
But certainly conscience, as classically illustrated in the “Tom and Jerry” cartoons where there are two figures usually the good side an angel, and the bad the devil loom over the characters shoulders, and usually as we can expect from a classic cartoon the character has to experience and foresee the evil side before the good comes to settle. At one part in our lives we have committed sin and tried to cover up troubles with our Jekyll, but in Christian beliefs “good has the strong hold over evil” which is entirely true when Dr. Jekyll tries to restrain or kill off the Mr. Hyde in himself, but he doesn’t realise that no one can not be truly one without being two.
We need both Jekyll and Hyde to become one without both we are nothing. He cannot destroy that part of himself. As time goes on, however, Mr. Hyde’s appearance becomes even more disturbing. In his confession, Dr. Jekyll writes: “But when I slept, or when the virtue of the medicine wore off, I would lead almost without transition.” the more Jekyll appeared as Hyde the stronger Hyde got but until Hyde was strong enough to overcome Jekyll his rage and depression built up in side, greater and greater until Jekyll would release him, then he would go on an outraged skirmish with no objectives to release his prejudiced hate towards Jekyll; hopping that his fault will result in Jekyll’s fall.
The Essay on Double Person House Jekyll Hyde
... the form of Mr. Hyde. The house, like Dr. Jekyll, has a dark side. On the front side of the house, it ... secret of the nature of Dr. Jekyll would have created a scandal beyond belief in those times. This book ... know myself, at the first breath of this new life, to be more wicked, tenfold more wicked, sold a ... it was, the story would not have been as good. Steveson used the house greatly to his advantage, ...
The idea of scientists who have lost control of their creation has be expanded on by the film Frankenstein, where the creation turns on the creator much like Jekyll and Hyde. The final end to both Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is death by poison. They could not live or congregate with each other, but they could not be fully separated into two single persons in two bodies. Dr.
Jekyll says, in his final confession: “Will Hyde die upon the scaffold? Or will he find the courage to release himself at the last moment? God knows” Jekyll knows Hyde will result in the end of him he just doesn’t know how long he has left to live, if he has any time at all the last period of life is usually to be spent as happy as I cant but for some reason Jekyll is in complete sorrow for his induction of Hyde into his life. “As I lay down the pen, and proceed to seal up my confession, I bring the life of that unhappy Henry Jekyll to an end.” so curiosity did kill the cat after all.