Inspector Newcomen asks Mr. Utterson to identify the body of the murdered man.
Mr. Utterson and the inspector find half a walking stick and a burnt checkbook.
The police find half a walking stick in the street and a letter to Mr. Utterson.
Mr. Hyde inexplicably murders a gentleman in the street.
Mr. Utterson and Inspector Newcomen go to Mr. Hyde’s house.
The events are plotted in sequence in this manner.
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, a Gothic novel by Scottish novelist Robert Louis Stevenson, was originally published in 1886. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and simply Jekyll and Hyde are other names for the play. The London lawyer Gabriel John Utterson, who investigates a sequence of strange episodes involving his old friend Dr. Henry Jekyll and a vicious thug named Edward Hyde, is the protagonist of the novella. Towards the end of the novella, Jekyll and Hyde's identities are made known. Jekyll employed an unidentified chemical concoction to transform into Hyde in order to sate his most sinister urges.
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Answer:
B.)
Explanation:
"On May 29, 1851, Sojourner Truth, an abolitionist and former slave, gave one of history’s most memorable speeches on the intersection between women’s suffrage and black rights. Speaking to the Ohio Women’s Convention, Truth used her identity to point out the ways in which both movements were failing black women. Over and over, according to historical transcripts, she demanded, “Ain’t I a woman?”".
Answer:
A. Death.
Explanation:
Gary Soto's poem "The Tempest 4.1.156-8" is a reference to William Shakespeare's play "The Tempest". But Soto used this play and gave it a slight twist, with the poem leaning towards the theme of death.
The use of the phrase<em> "eternal sleep"</em> in the second line of the poem is suggestive of death, the eternal sleep of a person. Soto, like Shakespeare, believes that we are not to be in this world forever. He states <em>"We are such stuff... rounded with a sleep"</em>. Then he continues with the line<em> "but before this eternal sleep"</em>, suggesting the scene where <em>"our loved ones look away"</em> to not see us die before their eyes.
Thus, the correct answer is option A.