Stevenson’s
novella ‘The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’ is a dramatic demonstration
of the fundamental truth that human beings are both good and bad; that the
primitive is within all of us, no matter how ‘civilised’ we believe ourselves
to be. Stevenson uses Jekyll’s transformation into Mr Hyde in order to give
this duality a physical from. Jekyll/Hyde’s indulgence in vice and depravity
results in him no longer being able to control these changes. His eventual
self-destruction demonstrates that the ‘good’ aspect of Jekyll was unable to
defeat his depraved id, Hyde, apart from in death.
One
of the novellas central themes is the clash between Victorian rationalism and
the supernatural and Stevenson uses Utterson as an embodiment of this
rationality. Utterson is always trying to find a rational and logical
explanation for events happening around him and even purposely dismisses any
supernatural possibilities. Also Mr. Enfield who is introduced in the beginning
approaches life in a very similar way to Utterson. This first chapter
highlights the proper, respectable Victorian attitude via these two characters.
Both very reserved, even to the point that they will enjoy a lengthy walk every
Sunday without even saying a word to each other. Both of these men share a
distaste for gossip and sensational stories and won’t indulge in a catty
conversation about people they know, hence they steer away from discussing the
matter of Hyde once they realized he is someone Utterson is familiar with. This
shows the Victorian value system that privileged reputation over reality.
Gossip and rumours are a weapon that in the hands of someone that is listened
to, can be lethal. In a society so focused on reputation, blackmail proves a
particularly potent force, since those possessing and concerned with good
reputation will do anything to preserve them. This can be seen when Hyde
tramples the little girl and can be blackmailed to pay the family money. ’No
gentleman but wishes to avoid a scene’ When even a ‘monster’ like Hyde can be
persuaded by blackmail of tarnishing his reputation, this shows just how
important it was to keep a clean record in Victorian times. By starting the
novella off with Utterson and Enfield both very rational, respected men, Stevenson
proves better able to dramatize the opposition between the rationalism that both
men represent and the supernatural aspect and nature of the story. The
Victorian hypocrisy and need for respectability is also highlighted by the
neighbourhood that Utterson and Enfield walk through. This area isn’t a vastly
prosperous or wealthy but it still feels the need to look it and to be
outwardly perfect. It is an upcoming neighbourhood but Stevenson suggest that
there’s more to its ‘rows of smiling saleswomen’ than what first meets the eye.
This again shows just how much effort the Victorians are willing to go through
to keep up a façade of respectability. This street also ties in the other
central theme of the novella; duality. Stevenson uses the friendship of the cut
and dry Utterson and the know man about town Enfield to portray a unexpected
liaison of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ of human nature. This is to show the duplicity of
life.
Setting
in the first chapter is used by Stevenson to create a mysterious atmosphere and
to highlight duality in Victorian England. The neighbourhood that Utterson and
Enfield walk through is described to have an ‘air of invitation’. It is an up
and coming street, which is painted to be perfect and has a feel that something
isn’t quite as it seems. All this grooming is veiling ‘it’s more florid
charms’. The setting is to show duality straight from the beginning and to
bring contrast to the importance of the door. The door that ‘features the marks
of prolonged and sordid negligence’, stands out from the rest of the street as
being is has a ‘sinister’ feel to it. It shows that whoever occupies the house
that this door leads to puts no value on the Victorian ideas of reputation and
respectability. This door also shows duality in life, amidst the perfectness
there is something seedy and ‘twisted’ just behind the corner. The blank face
of the door, without no windows and ‘neither bell nor knocker’, shows a certain
want for privacy and suggest that there is something going on inside that they
wish to keep from the prying eyes of others.
Stevenson
uses characterisation in the beginning to set a base for the rest of the
novella. The story begins with the description of Utterson. He is told to be an
‘austere’ person, especially with himself and a bit of a boring character, yet
somehow very lovable. The lawyer is trustworthy and a man of his word, he is
someone with ‘an approved tolerance for others’ and thus is often ‘the last
reputable acquaintance…in the lives of down going men’’ This aspect of his
personality suggest not only a sense of charity, but also hints that Utterson
is intrigued, in some way, by the darker side if the world –the side that the
truly respectable, carefully avoid. This is probably what leads him to
investigate the strange case of Mr. Hyde in the first place. Stevenson uses the
fact that Utterson is trustworthy as a way to lay down a base for the whole
novella, hence it is mostly written from the point of view of Utterson and this
way the reader can be sure that the story is true. Also the unlikely
relationship between Utterson and Enfield is to emphasise and almost to prove
that Utterson is in fact likeable and that people want to spend time with him
even if he is ‘a man of rugged countenance’. In the ‘Story of the Door’ Hyde is
introduced for the first time as well. Enfield has met Hyde in a horrible way
and once he tries to tell Utterson about this person he cannot find the words
to do so. “There is something wrong with [Hyde’s]
appearance,” Enfield says. “I never saw a man I so disliked, and yet I scarce
know why. He must be deformed somewhere; he gives a strong feeling of
deformity, although I couldn’t specify the point.” In other words, Hyde’s
ugliness is not physical but metaphysical; it attaches to his soul more than to
his body. Enfield and, later, Utterson, whose minds are not suited to the
metaphysical, can sense Hyde’s uncanniness but cannot describe it. Their
limited imaginations fail them as they approach the eerie and incomprehensible;
as rational clashes with irrational, words aren’t enough to explain.
The beginning of
‘The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde’ set a tone for the rest of the
novella effectively. It brings in the themes of duality and hypocrisy of
Victorians right from the start and uses many different ways to show them. It
doesn’t tell you much about anything, only bits and pieces of a mystery, but it
tells you enough to want to keep reading. Stevenson uses characterisation as a
way to make the story deeper and to showcase the different ideals and values of
the time period. It is a beginning that creates a sense of mystery and eeriness
by detailed setting and atmosphere.
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