My world before you came was black and white, No shades of gray, no varied hues to see, but then each day was wonderful and bright, because you brought the color back to me. Look at there! A sky so vast And deeply blue, green grass that gleams as brightly As jewel with golden yellow flowers peeking through, reflected in your eyes, pure crystals pools.
Your question is incomplete because you have not provided the answer options, which are:
Poole is conflicted about barring Utterson from the house.
Utterson is conflicted about his attitude toward Jekyll.
Jekyll is conflicted about isolating himself from society.
Utterson is conflicted about bothering Poole repeatedly.
Answer:
Utterson is conflicted about his attitude toward Jekyll.
Explanation:
In Robert Louis Stevenson's "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Utterson has ambiguous feelings regarding his friend Jekyll. On the one hand, he thinks sympathetically and thoughfully of Jekyll. On the other hand, after seeing the harmful change Jekyll has caused in his friend Lanyon, Utterson cannot help but feel uneasy and hesistant about him. In fact, deep in his heart he prefers not to be allowed to see Jekyll at his house.
Cupid is distracted with earthly women and Venus is unhappy with that because she wants cupid to marry a goddess. Cupid likes a human though named Psyche. Zeus later grants <span>Psyche her wish to be a goddess so that cupid could marry her and that's what happens.
Hope this helps!</span>