Sunday, November 3, 2013

Reputation

“The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde”
            The story begins with the description of a lawyer named Mr. Utterson. Mr. Utterson is a well-respected man “that was never light by a smile; cold, scanty and embarrassed in discourse.” Mr. Utterson has a relative and close friend, named Mr. Enfield. The two friends enjoy going on walks together. One night they are walking through an affluent part of town and they see an old beat down house that seems out of place. Enfield recalls a memory about this old house. Enfield says he once saw a man run into a little girl. A crowd joins around the man and threatens to ruin his reputation. The man quickly runs into the house and comes out with a check for 100 pounds. The man was described as hideous, but Enfield can’t say exactly why. Utterson and Enfield find out the ugly man is named Hyde. Utterson recalls a will he drew up for a man Jekyll. The will states that upon Jekyll’s death, Hyde will claim all of Jekyll’s belongings. Jekyll is a very wealthy man, why would he allow Hyde to be the heir of his wealth? A theme in “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” is reputation. Mr. Utterson is well-respected and wealthy, so he acts very calm and formal to keep his reputation the same. Mr. Jekyll is well-respected and very wealthy, but why would he give Mr. Hyde the rights to his fortune. Mr. Hyde is an extremely ugly looking man that lives in the ghetto and goes around bumping into little girls and clubbing Parliament members to death. Why is Mr. Hyde, a man with a lousy reputation, the heir to Dr. Jekyll?
1)      What makes Mr. Hyde appear ugly?

2)      What is the importance of the will?

1 comment:

  1. Mr. Hyde appears ugly because he is a horrible person. We later find out that he is all of the bad and evil parts of Dr. Jekyll. The importance of the will is that it shows us there is a strange and unexplained relationship between Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

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