Zusammenfassung der Ressource
"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde":
Hyde Analysis
- "I had taken a loathing at my gentleman at first sight. So had the child's family, which
was only natural. But the doctor's case was what struck me. He was the usual cut and
dry apothecary, of no particular age and colour, with a strong Edinburgh accent and
about as emotional as a bag pipe. Well, sir, he was like the rest of us; every time he
looked at my prisoner, I saw that Sawbones turn sick and white with desire to kill him. I
knew what was on his mind just as he knew what was on mine." - Enfield, Chapter 1
- Hyde may be such an abomination
so that everyone wants to kill him
- Hyde may just appear
different to others
- Evil instincts not
being policed
- Only family
should feel anger
- The gentlemen want to commit murder
- Enfield wants
to kill him?
- A doctor wants to kill him?
- Irony
- A man who's job is meant to be
saving people wants to kill one
- Stevenson is saying does society stick to
Christian values or are we hypocrites
- Hyde's point of view
not being shown
- We only hear what others think
- "Sawbones"
- Violent term
- Doctors seen as dangerous?
- "He [doctor] was the usual cut and dry
apothecary... emotional as a bagpipe"
- Someone so emotionless became
emotional at the sight of Hyde
- Hyde that hideous?
- Normal for doctors to be emotionless?
- Scientists suffer from lack
of empathy and don't see
the humanity in people
- More interested in
scientific progress
- Stevenson playing with
the fear of science taking
over religion in Victorian
era
- "Desire" has sexual connotations
- Hyperbolic language
- Loathing
- "turn sick and white"
- Irony
- Doctor's get rid of sickness
- The gentlemen want to kill more than the family
- Hyde has done little wrong (hypocrisy)
- They are still extorting
money from him
- "Only natural"
- Anger is OK for people as long as it is justified
- Hyde hasn't done anything wrong yet
- Excuse for blackmail?
- "my prisoner"
- People would do anything
when reputation is at stake
- All gentlemen act the same and think the same
- Enfield call Hyde his "gentlemen"
- Foreshadowing Jekyll's reveal as Hyde
- "He [Hyde] is not easy to describe. There is something wrong with his
appearance; something displeasing, something downright detestable. 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. He's an extraordinary looking man, and yet I
really can name nothing out of the way. No, sir; I can make no hand of
it; I can't describe him. And it's not want of memory; for I declare to see
him this moment" - Enfield, Chapter 1
- Hyde is so ugly words aren't
enough to describe him
- Not repressing his desire's
- Enfield and the "Sawbones"
didn't repress their desire to kill
- "Sawbones" turning "sick and white" is him becoming more like Hyde
- Everyone has their inner demons
- Reference to Sigmund Freud's
Id, Ego, and Super-Ego
- He was born to be a criminal
- Reference to Lombroso's
theory of the born criminal
- Hyde lack's humanity
- The lack of humanity
maybe what Enfield feels
- When someone goes against
the teachings of God
- Dislike symbolises what happens
to people who turn against God
- Stevenson rejects this view as Enfield
is acting more evilly than Hyde
- Enfield used to undermine
the Christian morals
- Hyde created by Jekyll
- The "deformity" is the
sacrilegious act against God
- Jekyll has been overcome by Hyde
- Only the fittest will survive
- Darwinism
- The creation of science has
overcome a man of religion
- Science will survive as it is
more fit to do so than religion
- Showing that religion
is nothing but a story
- Lack of Christian belief
- Tapping into the fear of the reader
- Survival of the fittest
- Hyde is the one who survived
- Humans are regressing
- Hyde's "deformity"
is evidence of that
- In Christianity, people are meant
to become better human beings
- Enfield's violent thoughts juxtapose with this idea
- Human's are becoming more evil
- Lack of Christian belief
- Showing that religion
is nothing but a story
- Hyde's "deformity" is his homosexuality
- "Something downright
detestable" is unsee-able
- This is the fear of homosexuality
- Hyde's point of view not even
discussed or considered
- Stevenson is saying that this fear
for homosexuality is unjustified
- The emphasis on "must" shows how
much the gentlemen dislike Hyde
- Unfair prejudice
- Hypocritical since
Hyde's point of
view is omitted
- Stevenson is highlighting
the hypocrisy of men
- Enfield is just
looking for a reason
- Enfield wants to
justify his dislike
- Hypocritical
- Stevenson is saying that the
hypocrisy is unjustifiable
- Pretending
to be moral
- "but not all of these together could explain the hitherto unknown, disgust, loathing and fear with which Mr.
Utterson regarded him [Hyde]. There must be something else, said the perplexed gentleman. There is
something more, if I could find a name for it. God bless me, the man seems hardly human! Something
troglodytic, shall we say? or can it be the old story of Dr. Fell? or is it the mere radiance of a foul soul that
thus transpires through, and transfigures, its clay continent? The last, I think; for, O my poor old Harry
Jekyll, if ever I read Satan's signature upon a face, it is on that of your new friend." - Chapter 2
- Hyde marked as the devil's item
- Completely evil
- Language is full of
Christian references
- Hyde's appearance is
being described
- Prejudice
- Highlighting the
hypocrisy of religion
- Utterson asks God to bless him
- Being affected by Hyde's evil
- How people should feel horror
when indulging in their desires
- Worried about soul going to hell
- "clay continent"
- Man made from clay in
the story of Genesis
- Continent makes up a
significant part of a world
- The human body is
significant to God
- Life has meaning
- Dr Fell is someone of unspeakable repugnance
- Just looked at Hyde, nothing else
- Hyde is still compared to
someone of extreme distaste
- Utterson didn't react this way
when heard of Enfield's blackmail
- Stevenson highlighting the hypocrisy
of gentlemen with Christian morals
- People are defined by their
appearances, not their actions
- Creation of science is blasphemy
- Science is making humanity worse
- "I do not like thee, Doctor Fell, /
The reason why - I cannot tell; /
But this I know, and know to well,
/ I do not like thee, Doctor Fell."
- Dr Fell is the imbodiment of our fear in science
- Stevenson is saying the
reason to fear science is
unfounded
- We have always feared science
- A nursery rhyme
- The hate/fear for science is childish
- To be fully human is
to avoid evil
- Hyde doesn't repress his desires
- "hardly human"
- Still a bit human
- Evil is a natural
human characteristic
- Utterson asks to be blessed
- Utterson is jealous of Hyde
- "Harry" the affectionate name for "Henry"
- Hyperbolic language
- Gothic horror
- "Satan's signature" reminds
us of Jekyll's signature
- Jekyll no better than the devil?
- Jekyll represent all
middle class men
- The whole system is corrupt
- Enfield doesn't tell Utterson
of Jekyll's signature
- All gentlemen are corrupt
- If the cheque was like Hyde,
then is the cheque evil?
- Enfield still accepts it
- All gentlemen are corrupt
- Stevenson is highlighting how gentlemen
would accept things from the devil
- Foreshadows Jekyll's forged letter
- Utterson keeps the letter a secret
- Jekyll's signature is the same as Satan's
- Corrupt
- "And then all of a sudden he broke out in a great flame of anger, stamping with
his foot, brandishing the cane, and carrying on (as the maid described it) like a
madman. The old gentlemen took a step back, with the air of one very much
surprised and a trifle hurt; and at that Mr. Hyde broke out of all bounds and
clubbed him to the earth. And next moment, with ape-like fury, he was
trampling his victim under foot and hailing down a storm of blows, under which
the bones were audibly shattered and the body jumped upon the roadway. At
the horror of these sights and sounds, the maid fainted." - Chapter 4
- Hyde represents original sin
- Created by defying god
- We are all born evil
- We need to be on guard all the
time to prevent ourselves from
becoming anything like Hyde
- Attack is unprovoked
- Attack aimed at a
defenceless, angelic man
- Proof that we are all born evil
- Carew was a knight
- Not even a knight can go against this evil
- Stevenson is saying that no one is safe
- Evil is a terrible danger
- "surprised and trifle hurt"
- Evil is greatest when we let our guard down
- Hyde was caged for a long time
- Jekyll gave into Hyde in the worst time
- Contrasts to what Hyde does to Carew
- Gothic horror elements
- Comic
- Zoomorphic language
- Reference to Atavism, the fear of regression
- Our evolution is making
us more primitive
- Survival of the fittest
- Hyde is "fitter" for survival than
the seemingly perfect Carew
- Making the reader fear of regression
- Creation of science overcame religion
- Religion is not fit for survival
- Stevenson scaring people with this concept
- Society is falling apart
- It is better to not worry about good and evil
- Morals are not fit enough for people to survive
- Darwin's theory suggests we came from fish
- Mankind is no more special than any other organism
- Religion isn't enough to keep people in check
- Hyperbole of the bouncing body
- To survive, violence is necessary
- For man to evolve, people
need to become more violent
- The fittest is not necessarily the nicest
- "the older man [Carew] bowed and accosted the other
[Hyde] with a very pretty manner of politeness" - Chapter 4
- "pretty" is very feminine
- Carew homo?
- Advancing Hyde
- Hyde's reaction represents the
reaction of society to gayness :)
- Even the purest of people
have their darkest of secrets
- Audience would be disgusted
- Maid behaves stereotypically
- Faints to emphasise horrors
- Maid contiually repeats the
story despite it being horrific
- Faking her emotions?
- Hyde may not be that bad
- Hyperbolic
- Violence is hyperbolic
- Carew strolling in 11pm?
- Committing unlawful acts
- Stevenson highlighting the hypocrisy of
men
- Everyone repulsed by Hyde but not Carew?
- Attracted to Hyde?
- Thought Hyde was a prostitute?
- "clubbed him to the earth"
- Reference to primitive methods
- "Clubbed" draws connotations of
cavemen and/or primitive beings
- A human is behaving like an animal
- Fear of regression
- Almost as if Hyde is burying him
- Stevenson is saying it is time
for people like Carew to die
- Only way to survive is to be more primitive
- Carew maybe a hypocrite
- "The most racking pangs succeeded: a grinding in the bones, deadly nausea, and a
horror of the spirit that cannot be exceeded at the hour of birth and death. Then
these agonies began swiftly to subside, and I came to myself as if out of a great
sickness. There was something strange in my sensations, something indescribably
sweet. I felt younger, lighter, happier in body; within I was conscious of a heady
recklessness, a current of disordered sensual images running like a millrace in my
fancy, a solution of the bonds of obligation, an unknown but innocent freedom of
the soul. I knew myself, at the first breath of this new life, to be more wicked,
tenfold more wicked, sold a slave to my original evil and the thought, in that
moment, braced and delighted me like wine" - Chapter 10
- Describes becoming Hyde as "innocent"
- The affect on his SOUL is innocent?
- Questioning Christianity?
- Hyde is the one feeling innocent
- Describes religion as
a prison for the soul
- Religion bad for society?
- Hyde outlives Jekyll
- Religion held Jekyll back
- Religion killing people quicker?
- Is science a better alternative?
- Hyde is described for his appearance
- This is why he becomes violent?
- Hyde's evil a response to his incarceration and repression?
- The soul is who we are
- The restraint of religion
was on him no more
- He has had these
desires to begin with
- Man is born with evil
- When religion is taken out of the picture, he experiences "freedom"
- "Original Evil" alludes to the idea of original sin
- Biblical reference
- Adam and Eve
- We are capable of evil
- At the beginning, Hyde is "an unknown
but innocent freedom of the soul"
- Ironic
- Hyde is appears to be evil
- Science seems to be naive
- Freedom leads to catastrophe
- "Younger, sweeter, lighter"
- Science appears to be making
progress but at a terrible cost
- After he lets go of religion
- Religion making people
older, bitter, heavier?
- Science causing physical pain?
- The affect of abandoning
your moral self?
- "The great sickness"
- Referring to being Jekyll?
- Turning to Hyde a cure?
- Hyde is an improvement
- Religion akin to a sickness?
- Religion contagious?
- Implies everyone's natural
state is full of sinful desire
- Hyperbole
- Physical description is an allusion to horror
- Hyperbole of pain and evil
- "like wine" mirrors readers
attraction to horror and violence
- Likening readers to Hyde
- Hyde described more positively than Jekyll
- Should all men aspire to be Hyde?
- Gentlemen don't name any of his vices
- They only name the vices they don't have themselves
- Blackmail
- Extortion
- Withholding evidence
- The gentlemen have all done these acts
- Sexual desires haven't been pointed out
- Could they all be possibly gay? :)