Jekyll’s laboratory is broken into they find Mr. Hyde dead on the floor and Dr. Jekyll is nowhere to be found. After reading a document left to Mr. Utterson, the reader finds out that Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’s stories are one in the same. By the use of a potion, Dr. Jekyll was able to turn into Mr. Hyde and take action in guilty pleasures he could not do as a well-respected man of the town. He was able to go into a world of pleasure and crime but it soon began to be too much to control. In his narrative Dr. Jekyll says “M an is not truly one, but truly two…If each, I told myself, could be housed in separate identities, life would be relieved of all that was unbearable” (111-112). The more Dr. Jekyll repressed the monster, the more he desired Mr. Hyde’s life, leading to the growing strength of Mr. …show more content…
Job is a man that is extremely loyal to God and because of that has pretty much the perfect life. One day Satan goes up to God and basically challenges him to see if Job will curse God. God allows Satan to destroy his family (not fair to them), take all of his possesions and then the second time, curse him with terrible sores all over his body. If Job were to curse God he would become evil. The first time he bows down to God and prays. The second time he actually opens his mouth but still does not curse God.
Job decides to ask God why he is doing all of this to him and wishes for the chaos to return. His friends on the other hand are telling him that he must have sinned because God only punishes people that deserve it. Instead of God actually telling Job why he tormented him he was condescending. God asked things that prove Job has no idea about creation. He talks about Behemoth and asks Job “Can you take him by his eyes, or pierce his nose with a snare?” (Job 40:24). He also asks “Can you draw out Leviathan with a fishhook or press down his toungue with a cord?” (Job