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  1. Edward Hyde (1609-1674), 1er comte de Clarendon, homme d'État et historien anglais ; Edward Hyde (1661-1723), 3e comte de Clarendon, gouverneur colonial ; Edward Hyde, l'antagoniste du Dr. Jekyll dans le roman L'Étrange Cas du docteur Jekyll et de M. Hyde (1886) et ses nombreuses adaptations. Catégories : Homonymie de personnes.

  2. Character Analysis Edward Hyde. Hyde, as his name indicates, represents the fleshy (sexual) aspect of man which the Victorians felt the need to “hide” — as Utterson once punned on his name: “Well, if he is Mr. Hyde, I will be Mr. Seek.”. Hyde actually comes to represent the embodiment of pure evil merely for the sake of evil.

  3. Mr. Hyde, the evil alter ego of Dr. Jekyll, a fictional character in Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886). John Barrymore (1920), Fredric March (1931), and Spencer Tracy (1941) gave notable film performances as Jekyll and

  4. Mr. Hyde Character Analysis. is the other identity of Dr Jekyll, but is first known to us as a separate character. He appears in the gruesome anecdotes of Enfield and the maid, as a horrifically violent gentleman, with little remorse and, most noticeably, a strangely powerful appearance of evil and deformity.

  5. LUNAMARINA/Thinkstock. Hyde looks different from Jekyll. He is shorter, so that Jekyll’s clothes hang off his body, looking ridiculous. His hands are darker, smaller and hairier than Jekyll’s, with knotted tendons making them look lumpy. In a passage that is difficult to understand, Jekyll explains why his physical appearance changes.

  6. M. Hyde. Edward Hyde est le côté maléfique de l’identité du Dr Jekyll. Il est apparu lorsque Jekyll a inventé une drogue qui divise sa bonne et sa mauvaise nature en deux entités. Hyde possède même un corps différent de celui de Jekyll. Hyde est plus jeune que Jekyll mais aussi plus poilu, comme s’il était plus primitif.

  7. 11 of the best book quotes from Mr. Hyde. “I sat in the sun on a bench; the animal within me licking the chops of memory; the spiritual side a little drowsed, promising subsequent penitence, but not yet moved to begin.”. “All human beings, as we meet them, are commingled out of good and evil: and Edward Hyde, alone, in the ranks of ...