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mr hyde mindmap - Coggle Diagram
mr hyde mindmap
Stevenson portrays Hyde's lack of compassion that is displayed over his victim which makes his character appear more malice and evil. It is this removal of human compassion that makes Hyde a criminal figure to fear in the entirety of the novel.
"With ape-like fury, he was trampling his victim" --> this quote shows Hyde's animalistic character
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“If I am the chief of sinners, I am the chief of sufferers"
"All human beings, as we meet them, are commingled out of good and evil: and Edward Hyde, alone, in the ranks of mankind, was pure evil"
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By mentioning the "chemicals" from which he has been created, Hyde is separated from the rest of the characters. This implies that Hyde has somehow infiltrated civil society
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His physical abnormalities explain his mental imbalance to the reader without explicitly stating as such. Hyde is frightening, because he is unexplainable. Often Hyde is referred to as the “creature” or the “thing” – all this shows that “[Hyde] seems hardly human,” and is a darker being.
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Devilish, evil and a criminal mastermind
Mr Hyde represents Jekyll's subconcious: he is the evil side of him that Jekyll created so that he could fullfill his sinful pleasures and wishes
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The juxtaposition of the violent verb ‘trampled’ with the adverb ‘calmly’ reveals his complete lack of consideration for the innocent victim and the vicious force with which he walks over her. The brutal vocabulary shows how dreadful the event was, shocking both Utterson and the reader.