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Jekyll and Hyde English Literature AQA

Can anyone mark a short little paragraph on why we should feel sympathy for Jekyll and give me feedback?

I fundamentally believe that it is normal and ordinary for us the readers to feel sympathetic and sorrow towards Jekyll as his intentions were simply to feel liberated and free from the inheritance of humanity. This resulted him to come to the conclusion that “man is not truly one, but truly two”. It elucidates the idea of how he desperately seeks urgency as he uses transcendental science to separate Jekyll and Hyde into two separate beings, as he is ashamed of his selfish “fanciful’s” and “desires”. Jekyll comes to the conclusion that there is a dual nature within man, which we fear to expose, as they are forced into this well-behaved nature. However, Jekyll feels that he is restricted from the freedom and enforcements of breaking laws. Perhaps he wanted to remove the guilt away and doesn’t want to pressurised and manipulated on putting on a facade to gain social advantages. This makes the reader feel a sense of embarrassment as they too know that there is dual nature within them. Perhaps Stevenson uses the novella to criticise the Victorian men who display and reflect noble and etiquette qualities as they are detaining and restricting their immoral behaviour and inner self to be socially approved and respected by society, which is why Stevenson uses the characters Jekyll and Hyde to contradict these qualities as everyone in humanity has an immoral “pleasure” that they are forced to detain or they will be considered as an outcast or ostracised by society.

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