Comparing Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde And Frankenstein

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Honor's Summer Assignment Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Frankenstein both express human nature and its consequences. In the story of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Mr. Utterson endeavors to solve the mystery of Dr. Jekyll. He then discovers Dr. Jekyll's secret of having a hidden identity with a physically different exterior representing his dark side, Mr. Hyde, towards the end of the book. The story of Frankenstein revolves around Victor Frankenstein, who is fascinated with the mysteries of life. He studied various branches of science and was extremely focused on creating a living creature. A variety of conflicts of the monster and Victor are depicted in the book. In both of these stories, man is inherently good, anything can make him this way, and both good and evil can coexist. …show more content…

Man's purpose is to seek the true, beauty, and good. However, through sins, man can appeal to those, making his selfishness grow larger. A perfect example of this is when Dr. Jekyll could not control his evil identity, Mr. Hyde and soon knew that he could no longer revert into his original self again. Sometimes the result in evilness does not overcrowd the overall goodness that has been endowed within man. Unless there is a greater circumstance, then man may be engulfed by evilness where he cannot turn back to being good. This is seen in Frankenstein, where the creature did good deeds but in return only got bad treatment and he wanted to make Victor feel the same way by attacking his loved ones. Overall, man is inherently good, but can have

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