why is photosynthesis important to you?
If photosynthesis ceased, there would soon be little fo...
Why did Jekyll enjoy being Hyde? In other words, what aspects of Hyde’s persona were attractive to Jekyll? Hyde was not constrained by rules, manners, and social norms; he could be free in the truest sense. Hyde’s inhibitions were gone and he was free to act on his deepest desires.
When Hyde’s actions escalated to the point of murder Jekyll realized he was no longer in control, he began to feel guilt, and tried to suppress Hyde permanently. … Jekyll longs for his former boring life where he has friends and is loved.
After Hyde murders a vicar, Jekyll’s friends suspect he is helping the killer, but the truth is that Jekyll and Hyde are the same person. Jekyll has developed a potion that allows him to transform himself into Hyde and back again. When he runs out of the potion, he is trapped in his Hyde form and commits suicide.
At first, Jekyll reports, he delighted in becoming Hyde and rejoiced in the moral freedom that the creature possessed. Eventually, however, he found that he was turning into Hyde involuntarily in his sleep, even without taking the potion. At this point, Jekyll resolved to cease becoming Hyde.
Dr Jekyll is responsible for letting Mr Hyde out but he is not responsible for the crimes Mr Hyde commits. One way which Stevenson blurs the distinction between Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde is that they have the same handwriting.
But after two months as Jekyll, he caved in and took the potion again. Hyde, so long repressed, emerged wild and vengefully savage, and it was in this mood that he beat Carew to death, delighting in the crime.
The central thematic conflict is internal: Jekyll versus his own animalistic, evil impulses which are personified in the character of Mr. Hyde. Jekyll wishes to separate his wickedness from his everyday, upstanding persona.
The book is relevant today because in the same way that Jekyll is addicted to Hyde, people in modern society are addicted to alcohol and cigarettes to relieve pressure. The message in this book is if we ignore our evil side it will return with more vengeance which you wouldn’t be able to control.
But Jekyll’s transformed personality Hyde was effectively a sociopath — evil, self-indulgent, and utterly uncaring to anyone but himself. Initially, Jekyll was able to control the transformations, but then he became Hyde involuntarily in his sleep. At this point, Jekyll resolved to cease becoming Hyde.
It was Hyde, after all, and Hyde alone, that was guilty.” But such statements seem little more than an absurd attempt at self-justification. For it is Jekyll who brings Hyde into being, clearly knowing that he embodies pure evil. Jekyll therefore bears responsibility for Hyde’s actions.
Jekyll says he became Hyde instead of an angel, because the experiment’s purpose was to get his bad side to show through. … Jekyll becomes enslaved, because he feels good when he drinks the potion and has the bad side, making him want to keep drinking it, like an addiction.