commits suicide by swallowing poison
The book "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" is narrated by Mr. Utterson, a lawyer and friend of Dr. Jekyll. Throughout the novel, Mr. Utterson investigates the mysterious and disturbing behavior of Mr. Hyde, leading to the unraveling of the connection between Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
It was written by Robert Swindells as a retelling of the classic story of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Dr Jeckyll and Mr Hyde are the same person is you read all the book you will find this out. There is also a film about it.
Mister Hyde leaves an IOU for Doctor Jekyll.
mr. hyde
The cheque book in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" symbolizes Dr. Jekyll's attempt to separate his respectable public identity from his darker desires represented by Mr. Hyde. It highlights the contrast between the two aspects of his personality and the consequences of trying to keep them separate.
The theme is Horror and gothic
Jeckyll starts turning into Hyde more and more frequently and he sequesters himself inside his lab. As his potion to turn back into Jeckyll begins to run out (and he will be Hyde forever when the potion runs out) he writes a letter wondering if Hyde will kill himself or wait for the cops who will kill him anyway. -Earlier in the book, we indeed see Hyde dead by suicide.
Sir Danvers Carew played a small role in the strange case of Dr jekyll and Mr hyde in the book. He played the simple role as the person who gets killed by Mr hyde.His purpose in the book is to basically show mr hyde's true evil, AND to show how important Mr Utterson is in the book (He was sending Mr Utterson a letter)
AnswerAn example of an evil character by Robert Louis Stevenson would be in his book The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Dr. Jekyll is a scientist who to stay true to his good natured self creates his altore ego Mr. Hyde. So to answerthis question, Mr. Hyde would be the evil one.
Mr. Hyde of course.
Yes, "Jekyll and Hyde" refers to the novella "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" by Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson, which was first published in 1886. It explores the duality of human nature through the characters of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.