Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

  • Chapter 1 (Story of the door)

    Chapter 1 (Story of the door)
    Mr. Utterson and Mr. Enfield are out on the normal Sunday walk.
    They discover the door.
    Enfield tells Utterson the story of the trampled girl
    After Mr. Hyde tramples the girl, he gives the family a check in Dr. Jekyll's name.
  • Chapter 2 (Search for Mr. Hyde)

    Dr. Jekyll's will is in Mr. Utterson's control
    greatly disturbed Utterson, causing him terrible dreams and to be continually haunted with it
    Dr. Lanyon is an introduced
    Friend of Utterson and My. Jekyll
  • Chapter 3 (search for hyde Cont.)

    Mr. Utterson begins haunting the door waiting for Mr. Hyde. Finally meets him and sees the concern of Mr. Enfield
    Utterson visits Dr. Jekyll in concern
    He's not home, so Utterson talks with the servants, especially Poole
  • Chapter 4 (Dr. Jekyll was quite at ease)

    Dr. Jekyll has a dinner party with many friends, including Utterson
    Then Dr. Jekyll has a conversation with Utterson
    Utterson asks Jekyll why Hyde is the beneficiary of will
    Dr. Jekyll refuses to specifically answer how he knows Hyde
    Utterson agrees to give the will to Hyde if Jekyll disappears
  • Chapter 5 (The Carew Murder Case)

    It's October, a year later
    Maid in window sees murder in the street below
    One man beat another to death with a cane
    Utterson is called to help identify the body
    It's Mr. Danvers Carew
    Dead body has a note for Utterson
    Utterson searches for Hyde's house
    inside finds half of the murder cane (but it's Jekyll's) and a ransacked house, including a burned checkbook (looks like Jekyll's
  • Chapter 6 (Incident of the Letter)

    Mr. Utterson goes to Jekyll's House
    Utterson discovers Jekyll's connection to Hyde
    The Letter It's from Hyde to Utterson. It says to not be afraid because Hyde has means of escape. The handwriting is the same as Jekyll
  • Chapter 7 (Remarkable Incident of Dr. Lanyon)

    Utterson sees Jekyll become much more distraught.
    Utterson visits Lanyon, who is deathly sick and seemingly crazy. Jekyll hears of this and responses almost nonchalantly
    Lanyon dies soon after
    Utterson begins to feel burdened with a letter that he is not supposed to open until after Jekyll's disappearance
  • Chapter 8 (The Last Night)

    Poole's Visit to Utterson out of concern for Jekyll
    Utterson goes to Jekyll's house, hears clatter in the laboratory- must not be Jekyll- Utterson suspects Hyde
    Utterson and Poole discover Hyde dead- suicide
    They see a cabinet of samples of potions and many papers
    the will for Utterson
    Letters from Jekyll
    saying read Lanyon's letter- it's his confession
  • Chapter 9

    Dr Jekyll confesses to the use of drugs being linked to mr. hyde to dr. Lanyon
  • Chapter 10 (The End)

    all of the questions are answered. Jekyll created Hyde to do all of the bad stuff he could not do himself. He wanted to do all those things without anyone noticing. In the end of the story Jekyll can cone back to his original state so he disappears and that is the end