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100

Who wrote Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde

→ Robert Louis Stevenson.

100

Where is the story set?

→ In London.

100

What is Dr Jekyll’s full name?

→ Henry Jekyll.

100

What is Mr Hyde’s first name?

→ Edward.

100

Who is Mr Utterson?

→ Dr Jekyll’s lawyer and friend.

200

What does Dr Jekyll create in his laboratory?


→ A potion that transforms him into Mr Hyde.

200

What is the relationship between Jekyll and Hyde?



→ They are the same person.

200

What does Mr Hyde represent?

→ The evil side of Dr Jekyll.

200

Who witnesses Mr Hyde trample a little girl?



→ Mr Enfield.


200

How does Dr Jekyll describe his condition in his final letter?

→ As a struggle between good and evil within him.

300

What does Mr Utterson find when he visits Dr Jekyll’s laboratory at the end?



→ He finds Hyde dead on the floor.

300

What causes Dr Jekyll to turn into Hyde without the potion later in the story?



→ The transformation becomes uncontrollable.

300

How does Dr Lanyon react when he learns the truth about Jekyll and Hyde?


→ He is shocked and dies from the horror.

300

What literary genre best describes the novel?

crime story

300

What does the broken cane symbolize?
 

→ The loss of control and the violence of Hyde.

400

How does Stevenson explore the theme of duality in the novel?



→ Through the contrast between Jekyll’s respectable persona and Hyde’s evil actions.

400

What role does Victorian society play in Jekyll’s decision to create Hyde?



→ It pressures him to hide his darker impulses.

400
  • Why is Mr Hyde smaller and younger than Dr Jekyll?

→ Because Jekyll’s evil side was less developed.

400

What happens to Jekyll’s handwriting when he becomes Hyde?


→ It changes but remains similar enough to be recognized.

400

What moral lesson can be drawn from the story?

→ That repressing one’s dark side can lead to destruction

500

How does the structure of multiple narrators affect the reader’s understanding of the story?


→ It creates mystery and reveals the truth gradually.

500

What scientific and psychological ideas influenced Stevenson’s writing of the novel?


→ Darwin’s theory of evolution and early psychology about human duality.

500

How does the novella reflect the conflict between science and religion in Victorian England?


→ Through Jekyll’s attempt to play God by using science to separate good and evil.

500

Why can the story be considered an allegory of human nature?


→ Because it represents the coexistence of good and evil in everyone.

500

How does Stevenson use setting and atmosphere to enhance the Gothic mood?

→ Through dark streets, fog, and a sense of mystery and fear.