Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Character Analysis

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In The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the author Robert Louis Stevenson uses Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde to show the human duality. Everyone has a split personality, good and evil. Stevenson presents Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde as two separate characters, instead of just one. Dr. Jekyll symbolizes the human composite of a person while Mr. Hyde symbolizes the absolute evil. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, who are indeed the same person, present good and evil throughout the novel. In The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Dr. Jekyll has a desire for splitting his personalities and taking pleasure in two different lives. A sinister, malicious, abnormal, small man would control one life while; an honorable, wise doctor would control the other life. Dr. Jekyll produces a potion, which allows …show more content…

Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Mr. Hyde is “pure evil”. During the beginning of the film, Mary Poppins measures herself with a tape measure and it reads “ Mary Poppins, practically perfect in every way” (Mary Poppins). This separates Mary Poppins from the other characters in the film. In The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Stevenson displays Mr. Hyde as “pure evil”. When Mr. Utterson visits Dr. Jekyll he says, “I read Satan’s signature upon a face, it is on that of your new friend” (Stevenson 18). Mr. Utterson compares Mr. Hyde to Satan, showing that he is certainly “pure evil”. Stevenson used, hellish imagery to describe Mr. Hyde. In the Dr. Jekyll’s Full Statement, Dr. Jekyll mentions, “ All human beings as we meet them, are comingled out of good and evil: and Edward Hyde was pure evil”(Stevenson 84). Unlike others, Mr. Hyde is “pure evil”. Also in Dr. Jekyll’s Full Statement, Dr. Jekyll describes Mr. Hyde as “ wholly evil”(Stevenson 85). All these evidences show how fiendish and malevolence Mr. Hyde is. Furthermore, Mr. Hyde and Mary Poppins are complete

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