Thursday, February 9, 2012

Oblivious, but Obvious

Jekyll and Hyde, disguised as one; suffer the incurable sickness of the mind connected with the overpowering devil. Mentally dysfunctional, hungry for the satisfying taste of revenge, Jekyll lacks in the area of common sense. All peers know, believe, and “proven” the source of all sinister unearthly manners. Suffering multiple personality disorder, Jekyll refuses to ruin one reputation to save the other. Only the mind of a true sinister villain can successfully achieve the goal of murder, without the blame. Hiding the fact of immoral acts, a ridiculous letter stating the death of Jekyll himself proves the weakness and desire to come at hand with the father of hell, without guilt. Callous in the mind, unaware of others, evil spirits nonetheless overshadows the soul of both dual personalities of Jekyll and Hyde. The answer is oblivious, but obvious.

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