Answer:
The correct answer is Mr. Hyde and Dr. Jekyll are the same person.
Explanation:
In his letter, Lanyon tells about that night where he went to visit Jekyll. Through a letter (which was not typical of him) Jekyll asks dr Lanyon to go to his home and follow specific instructions, which dr does.
There, he narrates everything that happened that night. How Hyde through experiments that went totally in the opposite direction of what Lanyon approved scientifically and morally, he ended up transforming himself into his friend Jekyll.
Lanyon swore, before seeing what was going to happen, that this would be under professional secrecy, that is why he can only tell about it when he dies or when Jekyll disappears. What he saw left him so disturbed that he eventually ends up getting sick and dying.
Given this information we can say that the correct answer is Mr. Hyde and Dr. Jekyll are the same person.
Answer:
Its the 3rd one. Im pretty sure
Which is the best summary of the passage?
In the Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, a well re-known African American of his time recounts his life as a slave. He tells of the horrors of growing up in a plantation where he was a subject to extreme racism but manages to run away to freedom and later becomes a renowned writer and activist. He tells of how he was separated from his mother to a plantation farm. He witnesses his aunt being bitten by his owner and recounts how he flees Baltimore to one of the free states in the north.
Douglass denotes that, "<em> Mr Covey succeeded in breaking me. I was broken in body, soul, and spirit. My natural elasticity was crushed, my intellect languished, the disposition to read departed, the cheerful spark that lingered about my eye died; the night of slavery closed in upon me; and behold a man transformed into a brute!</em>" which portrays the mental and emotional state of a slave who had been dehumanized and the tools he used to transcend the difficulties he went through as a human being.
Douglass astute analyses the psychology of slavery with eloquent assertions of self, and a striking command of rhetoric lift. This work above others in its genre. Particularly memorable scenes include Frederick’s early life teaching himself to read, a fight with the slave-breaker Covey, and his apostrophe to freedom as he watches sailboats on the Chesapeake Bay, together with his interpretation of slave songs as songs of sorrow.