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... Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” by Robert Louis Stevenson has been critiqued as a masterpiece through out its entire literary existence. ... Jekyll was an addicted to Mr. Hyde. Hyde is the inner beast deep within Jekyll, and the release of him has taken over Jekyll like a disease. ... Jekyll fits the portrait of the addict as a man of the upper class. ... Jekyll in the novella is a man of high class, a noble doctor, and a man of moralistic virtue. ... The connection and addiction of Jekyll to Hyde is the evil they are speaking of. Stevenson shows the power of Hyde through his words, actions, and motives; yet, he shows the disease of Jekyll needing this power through his choices of drinking the potion. ...
Jekyll, like an alcoholic, relies on a substance to alter himself into a different state of mind.
Approximate Word count = 635 Approximate Pages = 2.5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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