In the story of “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”, Dr. Jekyll is a scientist who cannot tell the difference between good and evil. Mr. Hyde is the evil side of Dr. Jekyll. When Mr. Hyde was mentioned around Dr. Jekyll, his face turned pale and asked to drop the subject. It would appear that there are two different people being represented but something else seems to be going on. Based on information from the story, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are the same person but with two different personalities. The physical features that Mr. Hyde had was that he was pale with a displeasing smile. He was also described as a short man and he also looked similar to a dwarf. The author described him in this way while he could not “explain the hitherto unknown disgust, loathing and fear with which Mr. Utterson regarded him” (Stevenson). The physical features for Dr. Jekyll are that he was a very tall and well dressed man. He is described as a very peaceful and pleasant man to be around. Although it may seem that Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are the same person but they are never around at the same time so it helps the readers know if they are the same person or not. …show more content…
Hyde could be described as “something more, if there could be a name for it. God bless me, the man seems barely human” (Stevenson). His barely human quality speaks to his mental state because people look at him as barely human and he may also look at himself in that way as well. Mr. Hyde also has a broken sounding voice that can bother you when he talks. But for Dr. Jekyll, he is a very pleasant man. He is also very kind man because he is always inviting friends over for dinner. They both may still seem like the same person but Mr. Hyde is described as having a pale face and when he is mentioned around Jekyll he gets a pale face which may indicate that they are the same person not two different
When in the presence of Dr. Jekyll there is a comfort and peace that exist, however, Mr. Hyde instills fear and a feeling of discomfort. Dr. Jekyll's physical appearance in pleasing, he appears to be about fifty, stylish attire and smooth faced. Mr. Hyde's physical appearance is rather ugly and deformed and his attire is unkept and sloppy. When Mr. Utterson described Mr. Hyde he stated that he did not look like a man, but some damned Juggernaut.
Dr. Jekyll is a handsome man. He is tall and has kind eyes. The narrator describes him as “a large, well made. Smooth-faced man of fifty, with something of a stylish cast perhaps, but every mark of capacity and kindness.” While Mr. Hyde, on the other hand, is small, deformed, and ugly. Mr. Enfield states that he is “so ugly that it brought out the sweat on me like running.” Mr. Utterton described Mr. Hyde as “there is something wrong with his appearance; something displeasing, something downright detestable.” He also added, “God bless me, the man seems hardly human.” There is complete contrast in these two men’s
Completing Robert Louis Stevenson’s “Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”, it is clear there is an odd and unusual relationship between the two main characters, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The two characters can be seen as one person but with drastically different personalities. Dr. Jekyll is an older, well liked, respectable doctor. While, Mr. Hyde is younger, hideous, evil, and dwarf like. The different personalities represent that every man/woman have two personalities inside them.
Dr Jekyll is a decent looking man, tall and somewhat distinguished looking. Mr. Hyde is a small man, who has a strange look to him. Most people who see Mr. Hyde would say that he is kind of deformed, but his description is never truly revealed. When Mr. Enfield, a relative of Dr. Jekyll’s lawyer, first set eyes on Mr. Hyde, his reaction was much the same. “There is something wrong with Hyde’s appearance,” Enfield says. “I never saw a man I so disliked, and yet I scarce know why. He must be deformed somewhere; he gives a strong feeling of deformity, although I couldn’t specify the point”(Stevenson, Ch.1,
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is one person with two distinct personalities. The author uses the theme of duality throughout the story to describe the opposite nature of the two characters and the struggle they bear. Dr. Jekyll is a kind and handsome soul, well educated and liked by his friends and colleagues. Mr. Hyde is an evil and dark individual.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Jekyll represents good and Hyde represents evil, Jekyll is tall, handsome, kind, and friendly while Hyde is mean, dwarfish, ugly, and devilish this being because Jekyll has been good for so long, his evil is weak and small. Robert Louis Stevenson uses archetypes and word choice to create a dark, mysterious, silent, and empty mood. There are many things we do in the real world that are similar to the things done in the book, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, we can look at people and think, “that person looks friendly” or “that person looks doesn't look safe” just like in the book, we can use looks, feelings, and colors in the real world to create an impression of that person. There are many physical descriptions used in the book to describe the characters, Jekyll is described tall, handsome, nice, and friendly while Hyde is described as ugly, short, mean, devilish, and scary. This we can all conclude from the descriptions, colors, and how the character acts in the book, just as we do in real
Physically they both are very different. Dr. Jekyll is about fifty years old, he is large, tall, and has no facial hair ("smooth-faced"). Mr. Hyde has gnarled hands and is very short. He acts very vigorously. Even his face looks completely different from Dr. Jekyll.
1). As stated above Dr. Jekyll appears to have dissociative identity disorder and his other personality would be Mr. Hyde. In Stevenson’s book Hyde’s physical appearance is described by the other characters (such as Mr. Einfeild) as “displeasing, something downright detestable.” (Stevenson, 2006, p. 11). They also refer to him as having some form of deformity, although they seem unable to pinpoint said deformity, “He must be deformed somewhere; he gives a strong feeling of deformity, although I couldn’t specify the point.” (ibid). Contrarily Dr. Jekyll is regarded as the “pink of the proprieties” (Stevenson, 2006, p. 10). This shows a clear distinction between the two characters, even though they both are physically and biologically one and the same person, they are mentally two completely opposite personalities in contrast with each other. Furthermore, Stevenson’s book also shows that Dr. Jekyll unwittingly gave himself this disorder through his experiments despite being rebuffed and consequently is beyond
Dr.Jekyll and Mr.Hyde are in fact a single character. Until the end of the book, the two personalities alike, the well liked, respectable doctor and the hideous, bad Hyde are almost opposite in type and personalty. The author uses this marked thoughts to make his point. every one in the world contains opposite forces within him or her, an alter ego that hides behind them. Neither has a very interesting personality, it is the nature of their interrelation that makes the novel great.
We meet Mr Hyde, “a pale, dwarfish man” “of no particular age”, and we meet Dr Jekyll, a “large, well-made man of fifty” with a “large handsome face”. The way Stevenson describes them as opposites makes us think that they are infact two people, but as Stevenson builds up the clues throughout the book we realise that they are
Hyde is evil and Dr. Jekyll is good. Last, when Dr. Jekyll is transforming into Mr. Hyde, Jekyll takes note and states, “I have observed that when I wore the semblance of Edward Hyde, none could come near to me at first without a visible misgiving of the flesh.” This represents that people would judge him in such a poor way just based on his looks. Following Jekyll states, “This, as I take it, is commingled out of good and evil.” This proves Jekyll’s belief that every human has different sides to them.
Mr Hyde also differs significantly in appearance from Dr Jekyll, emphasised through repetition of how the doctor’s clothes were too big for him “He was dressed in clothes far too large for him, clothes of the doctor’s bigness…” This repetition draws attention to the appearance of Mr Hyde compared to Dr Jekyll. By comparing the two characters, who are actually one but differ significantly from each other, we can see how Stevenson has emphasised the duality within man, that there is often two sides, one good and one evil
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde follows the premise of multiple personality disorder. Even though those with multiple personality disorders do not change their physical appearance, they become a character they do not know and cannot control. Dr. Jekyll becomes Mr. Hyde, and one is not able to control the other. They know they exist, but they do not share their memories, feelings, or actions. Having the personalities become two different characters instead of just a changing personality creates a more integrating story-line. It creates more mystery, thrill and desire to discover the truth. It makes the illusion that the characters are their own people, and not one shared
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Written by Robert Louis Stevenson, “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” tells the story of a person with two sides, good and evil. The difference is shown largely through the physical appearance of the character Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde. Dr. Jekyll the ‘good’ person is described as “a large, well-made, smooth-faced man of fifty, with… every mark of capacity and kindness” (Stevenson 24). On the other hand Mr. Hyde, the evil side, has a deformed, ugly face that was not a sight one wanted to see.
This novel can be interpreted in many different ways; from the duality of human nature to the loss of control of many things, such as loss of judgment and moral control which plays a huge role in this novel. Dr. Jekyll has the power to have two personalities because of this concoction, and he is fully capable of control his evil side but I don’t believe he wants to completely at first. Yes there is a clear difference between the two characters Dr. Jekyll obviously has a better demeanor and doesn’t commit horrid acts when he is playing this person; however, they are one person. (NCBI) This novel is interesting in the fact the main character transformation is clearly depicted Dr. Jekyll is described as this tall handsome, middle-aged, successful man while Mr. Hyde is described as short, fat, angry man who no one liked. Jekyll and Hyde communicate by writing letters or notes to one another which helps predict what is going to happen next when the next