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Jekyll and Hyde - Chapter 1-2

Vocab Comp: Multiple Choice

1. obnoxious 1. B

2. protégé 2. D
3. benefactor 3. B
4. obligation 4. D
5. excursion 5. D
6. dapper 6. D
7. D
8. D
9. B
10. D
Comp: Short Answer
1. Utterson chooses to help others rather than judge them. This behaviour
defies the fact that lawyers tend to be arrogant and loud.
2. Because Jekyll is a highly respectable man. Mentioning Jekyll's name aloud
would be similar to defaming the man somehow.
3. It seems inappropriate because Hyde is named as the beneficiary. Utterson
is uneasy with the stipulation in the will and does not know how to handle the
situation with Jekyll.
4. Because Lanyon is one of Jekyll's oldest friends. Utterson hopes that Dr
Lanyon might have some insight into Jekyll's strange behaviour.
5. That the man has some invisible deformity. Although it is unclear what is
wrong with Hyde, Utterson has an immediate sense of fear and dislike, almost
as if the man exudes a sense of evil.

Jekyll and Hyde - Chapter 3-5

Vocab Comp: Multiple Choice

1. irrepressible 1. C

2. connoisseur 2. C
3. accost 3. B

4. hypocrisy 4. D

5. ruminate 5. D

6. apprehension 6. D

7. D

8. A

9. A

10.B

Comp : Short Answer

1. Jekyll begged Utterson to accept his will and confessed that it was
important for Hyde to be the beneficiary even if Utterson did not like the man.

2. After seeing the crime, the maid fainted. The police were called after the
maid awoke.

3. Sir Danvers Carew was one of Utterson's clients. The victim possessed a letter
addressed to the lawyer and the police wanted to know what the letter
contained.

4. When Inspector Newcomen and Utterson searched Hyde's rooms, they


noticed that everything was turned upside down as if it had been ransacked.

5. Jekyll says he will never lay eyes on Hyde again. Jekyll seems scared and
swears to Utterson that he will no longer have anything to do with H yde.

Jekyll and Hyde - Chapter 6-8

Vocab Comp: Multiple Choice


1. traverse 1. B

2. callous 2. D

3. doggedly 3. A

4. exorbitant 4. B

5. seclusion 5. B

6. inscrutable 6. B

7. A

8. B

9. D

10. C

Comp : Short Answer

1. Although Utterson was wary about the contents, he knew that there was
only one honourable choice and that was to do as Lanyon asked. Therefore,
Utterson stored the envelope in his safe.

2. Utterson suggests that Jekyll go for a walk with Enfield and himself.

3. Poole fears that something has happened to Dr Jekyll. According to Poole,


there have been strange noises coming from the lab and when Poole tried to
talk to Jekyll, it was not his master's voice that rang out in reply.

4. Utterson takes Poole's concerns seriously and accompanies the butler to


Jekyll's house.

5. Jekyll's voice is strange and unusual. Utterson tries to explain it away but
Poole says that he has served Jekyll for twenty years and knows his master's
voice. It is the voice that convinces Poole that something bad has happened.
Jekyll and Hyde - Chapter 9-10

Vocab Comp: Multiple Choice

1. abstinence 1. D

2. infallibly 2. B

3. commingle 3. A

4. correspondence 4. C

5, resuscitate 5. A

6. prevail 6. D

7. D

8. D

9. D

10. A

Comp : Short Answer

1. Jekyll is scared and needs Lanyon's help, both as a friend and a doctor.
Jekyll also believes that as a fellow doctor, Lanyon will be duty-bound to keep
his secret and may also be able to offer a solution.

2. Jekyll wants Lanyon to break into his lab to steal a group of potions and take
them back to his house.

3. The statement is used to explain all of the loose ends of the case. It is also
used so that the reader may understand the story from Jekyll's point of view,
how his passion for science turned into a horrific experiment and eventually,
his downfall.

4. The evil side of Jekyll. Hyde took on the darker traits of Jekyll's personality,
often culminating in cruel and unthinkable acts.

5. There was no mirror in the lab. After Jekyll figured out that something other
than his hands had changed in appearance, he arranged for a cheval-glass
to be brought in so he could document the physical changes.

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