Jekyll and Hyde

Cards (63)

  • Chapter 9 - Lanyon sees Hyde turns into Jekyll. He describes Jekyll's appearance as being ...

    "Pale and shaken and half fainting, and groping before him in his hands, like a man restored from death-there stood Henry Jekyll
  • Chapter 4 - Description of Mr Hyde hurting Sir Carew
    "Clubbed him into the Earth" "Ape-like fury"
  • Chapter 10 - Jekyll is describing how he felt when he took the potion

    "I felt younger, lighter, happier in my body"
  • Mr Hyde does this after being confronted by Utterson outside his Soho house
    "The other snarled in a savage laugh"
  • Chapter 7 - Utterson and Enfield are on their walk when they decide to go to Jekyll's house. They see him there sitting...

    "Like some disconsolate prisoner, with some infinite sadness of mien"
  • Chapter 7 - The expression Jekyll gave after meeting them at the window and their reaction

    "An expression of such abject terror and despair, it froze the very blood of the two men below"
  • Chapter 10 - Jekyll is recalling how his transformations to Hyde were uncontrollable
    "My devil had long been caged; he came out roaring"
  • Chapter 1 - Mr Enfield talks to Jekyll about Hyde's demeanour after the incident.

    "Black, sneering coolness/ like the devil"
  • Chapter 2: Utterson goes to Lanyon's house and describes him as...
    "Hearty, healthy, dapper, red-faced gentleman"
  • Chapter 5: Utterson's clerk is comparing the handwriting between the letter and the note.

    "The two hands are in many points identical"
  • Chapter 5:After the Carew murder, Guest and Mr Utterson compare the handwriting and say there is...

    "A murderer's autograph"
  • Chapter 6: This is Lanyon's shock after the transformation

    "He had his death warrant written legibly upon his face (...) deep-seated terror of the mind""
  • Chapter 1: Description of Mr Utterson in the involvement of other men

    "Last good influence in the lives of down-going men"
  • Chapter 4: Description of the setting as they're going to Hyde's house to find him. Hyde has just murdered Carew.

    "A great chocolate-coloured pall lowered over the heavens"
  • Chapter 2:Dr Lanyon describes Dr Jekyll's experiments as...

    "I have seen devilish little of the man. Suchunscientific balderdash"
  • Chapter 3:Utterson mentions the will, and Jekyll begins to make a joke about it, but turns pale when Utterson tells him he has been "learning something of young Hyde"

    "The large handsome face of Dr. Jekyll grew pale to the lips and there came a blackness about his eyes"
  • Chapter 6:Utterson has been excluded from Jekyll's house. Jekyll is ashamed hence he says...

    "If I am the chief of sinners, I am the chief of sufferers also"
  • Chapter 2: Description of the city

    "nocturnal city"
  • Chapter 9: This is what Lanyon says after his reaction to the transformation of Hyde to Jekyll. "O...

    "O God!" I screamed, and "O God" again and again
  • Chapter 2: Lanyon has told Utterson of the happenings between the child and Mr Hyde. His imagination becomes engaged and he swears the pun that...

    "If he be Mr Hyde, I shall be Mr Seek"
  • Chapter 10: Jekyll writes a letter, speaking about how Hyde was growing stronger and stronger. It includes how he "mauled...

    "I mauled the unresisting body, tasting delight from every blow"
  • Chapter 6: Jekyll writes a letter to Utterson, saying he is going to lead a life of confinement, so his friends can't see him anymore. This is all a result of Dr Lanyon's death.

    "You must suffer me to go my own dark way"
  • Chapter 10: In Jekyll's letter, the reader understands what it was like for Jekyll. Jekyll finally understands that he has good and evil in him

    "All humans are commingled out of good and evil"
  • Chapter 2:Dr Lanyon and Utterson are talking about how they were probably one of Jekyll's oldest friends. Lanyon says he and Jekyll have fallen apart due to their differing scientific opinions

    "He began to go wrong, wrong in the mind"
  • Chapter 9:Lanyon sees Hyde turn into Jekyll. He describes Jekyll's appearance as...
    "Pale and shaken and half fainting, and groping in his hands, like a man restored from death - there stood Henry Jekyll"
  • Chapter 8: Poole and Utterson are getting ready to break down the door , when Poole speaks about the screams he hears from Jekyll

    "Weeping like a woman or a lost soul"
  • Chapter 1: Enfield is explaining to Utterson during a walk. He saw Hyde do this...
    trampled calmly over the child's body(...) hellish to see"
  • Enflields reaction to the trampling
    "bought out the sweat on me like running"
  • Chapter 3: Jekyll is trying to avoid talking about a subject to his close friend Utterson
    "I thought we had agreed to drop this matter"
  • Chapter 8: Implies that Jekyll's scientific works were against religion and God
    "Pious work... annotated with startling blasphemies"
  • Chapter 10: Jekyll concealed his bad actions

    reputation"I concealed my pleasures"
  • Chapter 8:Poole is telling Utterson how Hyde was acting when he caught a glimpse of him

    "that masked thing like a monkey jumped from among the chemicals"
  • Chapter 10: Jekyll realised the inevitable dual nature of man through his scientific experiment and he also implies that it is a "primitive" characteristic so its from birth

    "I learned through the primitive duality of man"
  • Chapter 2: Reinforces Hyde's unnatural and peculiar appearance

    "Mr Hyde was pale and dwarfish, he gave an impression of deformity"
  • Chapter 1:Having recalled the story of Hyde trampling on the girl, Enfield vows to...
    "Make his name stink from one end of London to the other"
  • Chapter 10: Implies Hyde was always ready to project himself - suggesting Jekyll had to actively suppress his evil side.
    "my evil kept awake by ambition was alert and swift to seize the occasion"
  • Chapter 2: After Utterson meets Hyde, he is lost for words to describe Hyde due to the confusion circling his appearance. Yet Hyde is described as animalistic, so not human, but prehistoric.
    "The man seems hardly human!"
  • Chapter 1: Suggests Utterson to be a tolerant person who is willing to consider and appreciate other people's views and ideas.

    "he had an approved tolerance for others"
  • Chapter 1: Highlights Utterson to be a model Victorian as he carries the feature of not getting involved in others' affairs

    "I let my brother go to the devil in his own way"
  • Chapter 1: Depicts that Utterson holds characteristics of a Victorian typical man: maintaining good reputation and morals.

    "mark of a modest man" "backward in sentiment ;lean, long, dusty, dreary yet somehow lovable"