Answer:
A setting (or backdrop) is the time and geographic location within a narrative, either nonfiction or fiction. It is a literary element. The setting initiates the main backdrop and mood for a story.
Dr. Lanyon is an intelligent, respectable lawyer who is suspicious the "Mr. Hyde" is threatening or bullying Dr. Jekyll into giving him property and leaving money for him in his will. Because Dr. Lanyon is an intelligent man, he always looks for a logical, practical answer, which is why he does not wonder is Hyde and Jekyll are the same person.
One of the recurring themes in the Death of Ivan Ilyich is the two lives that people live in. One is the shallow way of life which consists of materialism and selfishness. The second is the real life which shows the truer meaning of life through deep human relationships, sense of belonging, and strength of character.
Answer:
struggle, or death since they're definitions are also rather grim and give people anxiety.
The jar in Wallace Stevens's "The Anecdote of the Jar" most likely symbolizes <span>human order and the drive to arrange things according to a pattern. It is there to say that nature cannot be controlled by humans - no matter how hard the narrator tries, he cannot fit the whole of Tennessee into the jar, the same way a man cannot dominate over nature.</span>