Evil can be seen differently through the eyes of everyone –
to some people evil may be an abusive parent and to others it may just be the complete
darkness when they are alone in a dark room. It frightens us, sends shivers down our
spines, and can envelop us if we let it.
A prominent form of evil known by everyone is Satan; the very creature
that leads humans, if they allow, away from the love of God and into the arms
of Hell. In the novella Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson, Dr. Jekyll’s creepy doppelganger,
Mr. Hyde, is the very depiction of Satan.
A creature that dwells in the night, Hyde inflicts fear upon anyone
around him, revealing that the evil of his presence is undeniable and
inescapable.
The “desire
to kill him” (40) is inevitable; who wants to let the devil live and thrive
near their home? Yet after he tramples a
young girl in the streets at three A.M., the crowd that gathers allows Hyde to
walk away without punishment. A man,
walking the streets of London; a threat, with the nerve to walk away from its
own destruction; a beast, a “man [who] seems hardly human” (52) who is ugly for
some unknown reason. Every character
thus far in the novella notices that Hyde has devil-like qualities; “he
[speaks] with a husky, whispering and somewhat broken voice” (52) and has a “displeasing
smile” (52). The air about him contains
tension and fright, which holds his power; the same power of Satan to draw
people into his beliefs rather than their own.
Hyde could easily utilize fear to nurture the insecure into his own
grasp, just as the serpent seduced Eve into eating the forbidden fruit. He will continue to wreak havoc in London as long as no one
stops him; and though Jekyll states that “the moment [he] choose[s], [he] can
be rid of Mr. Hyde” (58), it is his choice between letting evil run the streets
or bottling it up and never again letting it out.
I'm able to catch what aspects of the first three chapters that were read just by reading your point of view. You've taken text from a novella and altered it so we could understanding exactly what the characters are seeing and feeling towards Hyde. Well done.
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