Great Expectations And Jekyll And Hyde Analysis

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Charles Dickens’s Great Expectations and Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde are on the top list of the well-known classics. These brilliant authors create characters struggling to keep up with the social class of the nineteenth century. Their envious needs drive them to commit their uppermost desires all the while creating and maintaining a representable reputation. Each masterpiece throws the reader into the characters’ world of Victorian England where a good name is essential and proper manners are expected. The purpose of the two books were no more than to entertain their audience with the unforgettable stories of the main characters’ lives. Both Dickens and Stevenson bring out the era of which they lived in by the way the characters act. For example, in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Hyde pays his way out of the first crime he is convicted of because his reputation was on the line. The men who caught Mr. Hyde threatens to “make his name stink from one end of London to the other” (Stevenson, 41). While in Dickens’s character, Pip, education and capital is needed to become...

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