Dr. Jekyll is a man with a deeply divided sense of private self and public self. He is a doctor and a long-time good friend he is also a scholar. Mr. Hyde thinks about "himself as a fifty years old a large tall man without facial hair". He believes that Dr. Jekyll is devoted to charities and to his religion.…
In the story “The strange case of Dr.Jekyll and Mr.Hyde”, it is a story based around the duality personality of Dr.Jekyll and Mr.Hyde. The story conveys the differences of actions between Hyde and the Doctor. They are two separate personalities, Hyde is a dingy, short, ugly man and the doctor is tall, successful, handsome man. Also Hyde is very to himself and the Doctor has many friends and companions. There is one thing that makes them quite similar, they’re sneaky. One man was only slightly more witted than the other.…
At this point in the story, Dr. Jekyll has not completely accepted Edward Hyde as being a part of him. He recognizes that Edward Hyde is “pure evil” but needs further proof that so much evil can be part of a person that is good. The story describes his transformation after drinking the potion as mental, physical, and spiritual. The spiritual part is very interesting because Dr. Jekyll in part always thought he was a fraud and even though he did walk the line of good he expected he was not truly good. I think Hyde was a manifestation of his thoughts of impurity because deep down he believed to have a good soul he must never have impure thoughts. I think this was his true…
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is perhaps the purest example in English literature of the use of the double convention to represent the duality of human nature. That Dr. Jekyll represents the conventional and socially acceptable personality and Mr. Hyde the uninhibited and criminal self is the most obvious aspect of Stevenson’s story. The final chapter, which presents Jekyll’s full statement of the case, makes this theme explicit. In this chapter, Jekyll fully explains, though he does not use the Freudian terminology, that what he has achieved is a split between the id and the superego.…
Mr.Hyde has a persona of being rude and evil. For example, on page 4 Mr.Hyde tramples a 8 year old girl and has no remorse about it. I also feel as if Mr.Hyde is both a persona and shadow that Dr.Jekyll hides behind. Dr.Jeykll has this evil shadow that transforms into Mr.Hyde so that he can be that side of himself that he hides away. He might of wanted to create Mr.Hye so he could have…
Jekyll and Mr, Hyde has a very similar message to the one found in Dracula. The struggle between Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is the epitome of self-indulgence. Dr. Jekyll is a kind, giving, knowledgeable individual that completely removes himself from society to become Mr. Hyde. Mr. Hyde is the exact opposite of Dr. Jekyll in every way. Instead of contributing to society, he is a vile individual that tramples a young girl and later murders a man in the street. This story is really what society is founded upon, an idea that individuals must contribute to the community, or at the very least not be a burden. I wholeheartedly agree with this rebuke of the “survival of the fittest” concept. A strong community where the burden is shared and no one becomes this metaphorical self-serving monster is preferable to the alternative of a bunch of individuals looking out for…
Resume: Mr Utterson is having one of his Sunday walks with his friend Mr Enfield. They arrive at a joyful street, and at a corner there is a contrasting dark door. Mr Enfield starts telling a story of which that door reminds him. He was walking at night, in a desert area of London, when a man trampled on a little girl and didn't even help her up. That man was mysterious and his appearance detestable. The man was stopped by Enfield and agreed to pay for the little girl's injuries. The story catches Utterson's attention and he learns from his friend that the man's name is Hyde and that he regularly goes into the building with the door. The two friends then decide never to talk of this again.…
Hyde is closely associated with darkness in both his personality and setting, Dr. Jekyll is mostly associated with light. In Jekyll’s physical appearance, he is the opposite of Hyde. Hyde is described as a hunched over dark figure, while Dr. Jekyll is said to stand tall and give off positive vibes, as well as not have an ugly face. Because Hyde’s physical appearance is associated with darkness, Dr. Jekyll’s physical appearance must be considered as light because the opposite of dark is light. Notice how it was stated earlier that Dr. Jekyll is mostly associated with light. He is not always associated with light because in Jekyll, Mr. Hyde exists; hence bad exists inside of Dr. Jekyll along with good. Nabokov points out this mixture of good and bad in Jekyll repeatedly in his essay. The three following quotes from his essay, “Is Jekyll good? No, he is a composite being of good and bad, a preparation consisting of a ninety-nine percent solution of Jekyllite and one percent Hyde.”(10), “Jekyll’s morals are poor from the Victorian point of view. He is a hypocritical creature carefully concealing his little sins. He is vindictive, never forgiving Dr. Lanyon with whom he disagrees in scientific matters. He is foolhardy. Hyde is mingled with him, within him.”(10), and “Jekyll is not really transformed into Hyde, but projects a concentrate of pure evil that becomes Hyde, who is smaller than Jekyll, a big man, to indicate the larger amount of good that Jekyll…
However in the Taoism, a chinese religion, to be a good person you must seek balance between the two sides. “When one realizes the need for balance between yin and yang, and stops struggling against that which is natural, one can gain contentment through wu wei, enlightened non-action”(Wheeler 4). This idea of having both sides of the spectrum in duality to be at equilibrium is the key to not having negative effects of suppressing one side of the spectrum. In The Strange Case of Dr.Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Dr.Jekyll attempts to remove the evil side of his dualistic nature to fit in the Victorian society’s standards. He considered the duality of man to be “a curse of mankind that these incongruous faggots were thus was bound together” (Stevenson) and thus tries to answer the question how were these two sides were to be separated. What Dr. Jekyll soon learns is that both sides are a necessity to the nature of man. In attempted to overthrow his evil side, he enables it. Mr. Hyde slowly takes over Dr. Jekyll, and his evil desires manifest in reality. For example, the murder of Sir Danvers Carew could have been avoided if there was only balance between the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Jekyll tries to suppress his evil side which only resulted in a terrible…
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson leaves the reader to ponder whether not Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are the same person or two different people. The book describes several commonalities and differences between Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The differences and commonalities are not just found in the physical description of the characters but also in their personalities and their actions. It is my opinion that Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are in fact one person with two separate personalities.…
"The moment I choose, I can be rid of Mr Hyde" (23). In the novella The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Jekyll experiences the behaviors of a split personality similar to a drug addict. When Dr. Jekyll becomes his divided self he transforms into Hyde, a completely different human being. Dr. Jekyll's addiction begins with loss of control and quickly leads to isolation. These addictions lead to downfall of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.…
Hyde was his bad side and his pure side, which everyone came to know, wasn’t what Jekyll really wanted. He wanted to let Hyde out and to do so he had to take drugs, like Sonny did. Jekyll’s surface was a proper man but his true identity was what lied beneath him and what he allowed to surface when he conjured up his potion. Letting out this carnage side made Jekyll feel alive, with no remorse of what he was doing. The aliveness he felt was the disregard of his culture and their rules, and this is where he found himself happy. The disobeying Hyde was Jekyll’s true identity and how he really wanted to feel. Have you ever one day been faced with the opportunity to break cultures rules and done it? Did you feel exhilarated? Ones identity will never change. When they figure out what the true inner person is that, whether its a naughty person or a great person is what surfaces when the person is alone or set with a straining situation. The Jekyll side is what culture wanted to see, but the true identity of Jekyll was the disobeying side of…
Not everyone is perfect. We all have weaknesses and character flaws. Some people drink too much; others smoking or spending too much money. Many people lead a seemingly moral and righteous life, but have secret, dark thoughts or desires. Mr. Hyde has all these flaws and he flaunted them openly. Actually, when you examine his character on a deeper level, the “respectable” Dr. Jekyll is actually and deeply flawed and immoral character. Mr. Hyde is just another part of him, his immoral subconscious, who, because he is given free reign, does the immoral things that Dr. Jekyll couldn’t do because of his reputation. The greatest flaw that Dr. Jekyll has starts with the incident in his laboratory. He experiments with chemicals and discovers another side of himself. Stevenson characterizes Dr. Jekyll as a desperate man dependent on his symbolic drug to escape the moral confines of Victorian society.…
Violence only leads to more deaths, more terror, and more violence. Examples of aggressive and hostile situations evolving from violence includes Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet and Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. In Romeo and Juliet, rival families, the Montagues and Capulets are continuously killing one another in order to get reverence for the recently deceased ones. First Mercutio is killed, and then as a result many other people are killed, the feud ultimately ends with the death of the two titular characters. Another time in literature when violence has gotten out of hand was in. Robert Louis Stevenson novel. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is the classic novel by Stevenson that focuses on the dual-personality Dr. Jekyll who has the…
After becoming familiar with the characteristics of the world known mental disorder-schizophrenia, one may say that the peculiar events in the considered novel show that the protagonist may have been a victim of the mentioned disorder. By having this possibility in mind the novel eventually develops into a provoking mystery thus triggering a strong sense of interest in whoever is fortunate to be reading it. The main character of the novel Dr. Jekyll an Mr. Hyde written by Robert Louis Stevenson has been present and the reason of tragic occurrences in his surroundings. Such mysterious episodes can be thoroughly explained with the aid of reliable resources and searches on aspects that all come back to the initial theory of schizophrenia- “split personality”, Personality Disorder, Bipolar Disorder, Multiple Personality Disorder and so on.…