Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde Doppelganger Analysis

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In Germany, it is often said that seeing or meeting ones doppelganger, or alter-ego, is a very bad omen that signifies impending death. They are said to represent a person, but in their evilest form. Dr. Jekyll, from the novella Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson, does not meet his doppelganger; he creates him. Living in the proper city of London during a time which placed great value on manners and a gentleman-like nature, Dr. Jekyll felt restricted from even the time of his boyhood. He decided to; using his skill in chemistry, create a potion that would separate the two parts of him: good and evil. He named this other half Mr. Hyde and drank the potion almost nightly to release him into the city streets. On the other hand, During his nightly escapades as Hyde, Jekyll has been witness to many of his minor evils but the first major crime that Hyde committed was when he ran into and injured an innocent little girl. Jekyll’s only reaction to Hyde’s crime was to try to distance himself from his doppelganger after Mr. Enfield made the connection between him and the person who signed the check that Hyde had cashed for the girl’s medical charges. Jekyll “took and furnished [a] house in Soho… [and] open[ed] an account at another bank in the name of Edward Hyde…” (Stevenson 70-71). He is not at all concerned with Hyde’s actions and tells Mr. Utterson that “the moment [he] choose[s], [he] can be rid of Mr. Hyde” when Utterson attempts to confront Jekyll about having Hyde as the beneficiary on his will (Stevenson 20). Dorian’s first crime was leading on Sybil Vane and then breaking her heart without just cause. When he first saw her he said that “She was the loveliest thing [he] had ever seen in [his] life” and that only three weeks after meeting her, he was in love with her and had proposed (Wilde 50). But after he brought Lord Henry and Basil to one of her shows and her performance was worse than he had ever seen, Dorian told Sybil that she had “killed [his] love” (Wilde 84). She was as devastated as he was indifferent. When he returned home and saw the effect that his actions had on the painting, he was After months of restraining Hyde and refusing the urge to take the potion, Jekyll shamefully caves like an addict looking for a fix. He was “…tortured with throes and longings… [and] in a moment of moral weakness…” Jekyll took the potion (Stevenson 75). After being confined for so long, Hyde “…came out roaring” (Stevenson 75). He stalks the streets under the cover of night and violently attacks the first person he encounters, poor old Sir Danvers Carew. Utterson goes to confront Jekyll about his affiliation with someone who would commit such a horrible crime and Jekyll reassures him that “’… [he] is done with [Hyde] in this world’” (Stevenson 29). Jekyll is truly appalled that Hyde would stoop so low as to commit murder and makes a true and valiant effort to end their ‘relationship’ and to redeem himself. Dorian’s sin emotionally affects him much less. Basil hears the rumors that have been going around about his pure and innocent Dorian and decides to confront him about them. For all of Basil’s inquiries, Dorian only has one answer, “’I shall show you my soul’” (Wilde 145). Basil at first demands a real answer but Dorian is adamant, so the two men head upstairs to where the warped portrait lies in wait. When he sees what has become of his painting, Basil is horrified by the now-corrupt visage of what was once his greatest

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