Another example of this that is mentioned in the text
The use of imagery helps the reader imagine certain things such as characters or settings, helping the reader understand the text better. From the first full paragraph on page 51 to the second full paragraph on page 53, imagery is used to help show the strangeness and the evilness that just pours out of Hyde. Stevenson describes what Hyde looks like and how Lanyon reacts to him. For example, it's stated that the appearance of Hyde would’ve been laughable had it been on someone else, but as Lanyon wrote, “Rather, as there was something abnormal and misbegotten in the very essence of the creature that now faced me - something seizing, surprising and revolting - ... ” What should’ve been funny and light-hearted is described as revolting due to
This is a good example of a
Alexander Garibaldi Mr. Pellucaci English P.3 10 January 2023 Disgusting, this is the word used to describe Hyde and the terrible acts that he committed in the book Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde where he is the antagonist and the alter ego of Henry Jeckyll. Here are 3 times Robert Louis Stevenson made Hyde’s behavior particularly horrifying. One example of Robert Louis Stevenson making Hyde's behavior particularly terrifying was the time Hyde bashed in Carew’s head. It is horrifying because there wasn’t much of a reason behind the killing. He only killed him because it is implied that Carew is a good man and pure evil detests pure good.
These symbols present an idea of duality, compelling the reader to decide if it is a tale of two men or of a mad man. The similarities that occur throughout the novel assist the reader in concluding that both Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are in fact
As Stevenson was fascinated by Darwin theory of evolution he decided to portray it in his work. Due to the fact that in Victorian times the idea of rationalism was popular and that people weren’t supposed to show their strong emotions their darker sides were repressed and The locked doors and curtained windows of Jekyll’s house form the imagery of a man locking away the truth that lurks inside; Jekyll turning into Hyde is a metaphor of what happens when the unconscious mind is revealed; the murder of Carew symbolizes the repressed mind striking out at the conscious mind. The whole narrative is about unpeeling the layers that hide the repressed desires inside Jekyll Stevenson also uses several narrative points of view to intensify the feeling of a frightening outsider. As Hyde is often narrated in a mysterious way through different characters perspectives which slowly reveals horror a feature used in gothics.
Williams depicts the “realist compulsion” as the need to “make everything “all charactered and notable, seizing the eye”” (Williams 414). This is especially true in Stevenson’s use of visual imagery that “[seize] the eye”. Such is evident in the depiction of the characters Dr. Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde, and their environments. Dr. Jekyll is depicted as a man of “tall, fine build” (Stevenson 1699) while Hyde is constantly illustrated as a “pale and dwarfish” being (Stevenson 1684) and has strength that is visually compared to that of a “Juggernaut” (1683).