Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Good Vs Evil Analysis

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Good vs. Evil in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde “Man is not truly one, but truly two” (Stevenson 104). Or so is the belief of Dr. Henry Jekyll in Robert Louis Stevenson’s novel Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Jekyll came to this conclusion at a fairly young age after taking note that the desires he wished to indulge in were not widely accepted, and deciding that it would be best if he repressed these dark pleasures and instead lived only as his moral side. This decision created a great divide in the two selves of which Jekyll was made; neither side was any more or less a part of him, but his dark side, which later manifested itself as Mr. Edward Hyde, was hidden inside of him while the good and well accepted side, Dr. Henry Jekyll, was out on display. The man stayed like this until one day his curiosity got the best of him, and he decided to concoct a …show more content…

The relationship between Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde begins as that of a father and son but then shifts to that of equals vying determinedly for dominance because the more that Jekyll indulged in his dark side, …show more content…

In creating Hyde, Jekyll breaks the balance between good and evil within himself. Without that balance Jekyll cannot survive. Each time Hyde becomes active he gains more power over Jekyll, and ultimately leads to his downfall. Hyde started out as just the small things that Jekyll refrained from doing or even thinking about because he knew that he would not be accepted by society if he indulged in them, but as he grew more powerful little “undignified” pleasures turned into murder, and other horrible heinous crimes. The evil that Hyde possessed turned into something uncontrollable, while Jekyll remained Jekyll, not purely good and not purely evil. In the end Hyde’s evil overwhelmed Jekyll’s normalcy. Maybe there was a reason that society originally prompted Jekyll to repress Hyde within

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