a cane
The woman who witnessed the murder in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" is named Maid, who works at the house near where the murder took place. She provides crucial testimony about what she saw on the night of the crime.
In the story of the "Strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Dr. Jekyll turns into Mr. Hyde and visa versa. The story is associated with dissociative identity disorder where Dr. Jekyll represents the good in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde represents the evil side in Dr, Jekyll.
Dr. Jekyll's nickname was Mr. Hyde.
Mister Hyde is Dr. Jekyll minus all his goodness. Dr. Jekyll was a big man, of noble stature. Mr. Hyde was short and hunched.
The girl who was trampled in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" was going to deliver a message for Mr. Hyde, the evil alter ego of Dr. Jekyll. She was seeking to deliver a note to Dr. Jekyll's residence.
The servant girl witnessed Mr. Hyde committing a violent murder through her window one night in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde". This event terrifies her and leads her to identify Hyde to the authorities as the perpetrator.
The surgical theater in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" is called the dissecting room. It is where Dr. Jekyll performs experiments and transformations that lead to the creation of Mr. Hyde.
Mr. Hyde is the troglodyte in Dr. Jekyll and Mr.Hyde.
Mr. Hyde plays the role of Dr. Jekyll's darker, more sinister alter ego in "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde." He represents the hidden, evil side of Dr. Jekyll's personality that emerges when he takes a potion to transform into Mr. Hyde.
Dr. Jekyll first told Mr. Utterson the truth about Mr. Hyde. Utterson was Jekyll's lawyer and friend, and Jekyll confided in him about the dual nature of his relationship with Hyde.
Dr. Jekyll and Mistress Hyde was made in 2003. The movie is copyrighted.
"The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson, was published in 1886.