Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) was born in Edinburgh. In just 14 years, due to his poor health, he made a great contribution to British literature with his novels, poetry, prose. He is the victim of lung disease since birth and is the son of a middle-class parent who has been a protected childhood under ongoing care. The balance of his life is gaining his constant devotion to his work and he is trying to correct his illness and make him travel around the world. His travel articles are widely published, and his short stories are collected in many volumes. His first complete novel, Treasure Island, was published in 1883 and brought him a big reputation in the publication of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886) a strange incident. I will increase it. He then followed the Scottish romantic kidnapped (1886) and The Ballantrae (1889). In 1888, he and his family departed toward the South China Sea, went to a leprosy colony on Molokai, and finally settled in Samoa who died.
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde's hearing impaired Mr. Hyde Dr. Jekyll and Dr. Hyde experienced transformation, transcendence, and illegal era in the strange case of Hide. When Dr. Jekyll was Mr. Hyde, Hyde influenced the lives of several characters in Stevenson's story. In the process of imagining Hyde, the reader was shocked by the amazing performance of Hyde in the physical description. - Schizophrenia and Dr. Jekyll and Hyde's strange case The name of schizophrenia comes from "schizophrenia". "The kidney where the diaphragm is located, the structure that is dominated by the sacral nerve, Greeks believe that the area of the face is the place of thought, or at least the place of emotion (Berle 12)
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde's strange incident was the first Gothic novel published by Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson in 1886. This work is also known as Dr. Jekyll and Hyde, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde's strange case, or simply Jekyll & Hyde. This is about London 's lawyer, Gabriel John Utterson, who investigated the strange event between his old friend, Dr. Henry Jekyll and evil Edward Hyde. The influence of the novel is ... More