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They found a letter on the body of Sir Danvers Carew addressed to Mr. Utterson. Why did the police contact Mr. Utterson following the death of Sir Danvers Carew?
mr hyde
Mr.Hyde killed Lucy because Lucy got a letter from Jekyll saying leave this place at once and giving her money to do so. Until Hyde appeared out of the shadows . He had read the letter out loud to her. With jealousy for her love for Jekyll he stabbed her in her back while singing sympathy, tenderness.
Sir Conan Doyle wrote The Man with the Twisted Lip. It was a Sherlock Holmes story. It starts with a missing man and a beggar arrested on suspicion of his murder.
In 1602, Cormac Teige MacCarthy, Lord of Blarney was under considerable pressure from Queen Elizabeth and Sir George Carew, her Deputy in Cork. Carew suspected MacCarthy of plotting against the Queen and wanted him to swear allegiance and hand over legal tenure of his lands. Every demand of the English Queen was met with protestations of undying loyalty, flattering references and suggestions that he 'seemed very inclinable to the notion'. Nothing, however, was actually moving forward and Carew complained of his 'fair words and soft speech'. On the receipt of yet another MacCarthy letter, Queen Elizabeth exclaimed, "This is all Blarney; what he says he never means!" And so the word slipped into the English language and the rest is history... taken from www.blarneycastle.ie
mr hyde
Sir Danvers Carew's murder was witnessed by a maid who lived near the scene of the crime. She saw Mr. Hyde, the perpetrator, attack Sir Danvers Carew with a cane and beat him to death. However, the maid was too scared to intervene.
Mr. Hyde uses a heavy walking stick or cane to murder Sir Danvers Carew in the novel "Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde".
They found a letter on the body of Sir Danvers Carew addressed to Mr. Utterson. Why did the police contact Mr. Utterson following the death of Sir Danvers Carew?
Mr. Utterson :)
mr hyde
Sir Danvers Carew is a character from Robert Louis Stevenson's novella "Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde." He is described as a well-respected and honorable Member of Parliament, serving as a foil to the sinister and depraved Mr. Hyde. Carew's murder by Hyde serves as a turning point in the story, highlighting the destructive consequences of Jekyll's experiments.
Police contacted Mr. Utterson because his name and address were found in Sir Danvers Carew's pocket. As Sir Danvers Carew had been murdered, the police believed that Mr. Utterson may have valuable information regarding the incident due to his connection with Dr. Jekyll, who was also linked to the case.
a cane
After the murder of Sir Danvers Carew, Dr. Jekyll becomes increasingly distressed and expresses feelings of remorse. He experiences inner turmoil as the consequences of his actions weigh heavily on him. Jekyll's mental state deteriorates as he grapples with the duality of his nature and the consequences of his experiments.
Sir Danvers Carew is a respected member of society in "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson. He is a Member of Parliament and a client of Mr. Utterson, one of the main characters in the novella. Sir Danvers Carew is brutally murdered by Mr. Hyde, a moment that shocks the community and adds to the mystery surrounding the dual nature of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
In the novella "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" by Robert Louis Stevenson, the murder weapon used by Mr. Hyde is revealed to be a heavy cane or walking stick. This weapon is used by Mr. Hyde to bludgeon Sir Danvers Carew to death in a violent act of brutality.