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Welcome to another video. You've got Mr. Everything English. Now, we've covered the top eight quotes from McBTH. We've covered the top eight quotes from A Christmas Carol. We've covered the top eight quotes from Romeo and Juliet. But there's one more popular text left to cover. And that is the top eight quotes from Jacqueline Hyde. And that is why you are here today. Guys, in this video, we are going to cover the quotes that you need to learn from Jackal and Hyde for your exam. We're going to go over language, structure, form, context, everything you need for your particular quotes. Now guys, remember in your exam you will be given an extract and from the extract you must be able to pick out two quotes for two paragraphs. Then you must do two paragraphs on the whole text. That is where these eight quotes come into play. from these eight on the day of your exam, you simply need to be able to fit two of them. And that will be absolutely easy after I've explained to you how to use them in this video.
Now guys, before we begin, just my typical reminder, should you ever require classes for English, maths, and science from year 1 all the way up to Alevel, do check out everything education.co.uk UK guys, we cover English language, English literature, we cover maths, we cover science, we cover everything you need for your learning.
And finally guys, if you need to do exam practice, get instant feedback and see how you're getting on, please do check out the everything education app. It is a very good app to see how you are progressing. Links for everything guys are in the bio or the top comment down below. All right guys, let's switch over to the board and let's begin everything education tuition for maths, English and science.
Okay guys, so behind me on the board are the eight quotes that I recommend you learn from Dr. Jackekal and Mr. Height.
Number one guy, we've got ape like fury.
Number two, we've got the fog rolled over the city. Number three, like a fire in a forest. Number eight, trampled calmly. Number five, my new power tempted me until I fell into slavery.
Number six, these polar twins should be continuously struggling. Number seven, I conceal my pleasures. And number eight, the animal within me licking the charts of memory. These are the eight quotes that I believe are fantastic quotes to use and can and can be applied to lots of different questions. Now, each quote, guys, has got language devices, structural devices, form, and context.
So, you've got a technique, something to zoom into, and context for every single quote. Now, let's begin. Let's begin.
Let's begin. The first quote, guys, is a famous quote. It's a famous quote.
It's a quote that you've probably seen a thousand times. But the question is, what do you do with this quote? Now, some people say that this quote shows us that um Hyde, Jackal, whatever you want to call him, is really really bad and really really evil and so on. But what do I say about this quote? So, first things first, guys, it is a simile because it's comparing hy to an ape.
We're going to link it to Darwin's theory of evolution in about a minute and we're going to talk about the symbolism of the fury. Now the quote reads guys ape like fury and basically right hyde his anger his his his tenacity for evil gets worse and worse and worse he becomes more and more and more comfortable with his evilness in the beginning of the play he's trampling calmly kind of taking it easy but as the book develops not the play as the book develops he becomes a lot more violent He becomes a lot more aggressive. He becomes a lot more dangerous. Now, a typical viewpoint, guys, of this quote is that hide is really strong. Hide is really violent. Hide is really evil. And they all work. But let's dig a little bit deeper now, guys. Ape like fury.
It's describing the anger. It's describing the emotion of hide to an ape. Now, I want to link this guys to Darwin's theory of evolution. Darwin, guys, he argued that once upon a time, me and you were monkeys. Me and you were apes. Me and you were doing out.
Why did I do that? Let's carry on. We were doing that out in the jungle. And then the species evolved and evolved and evolved and evolved until we became the amazing humans that we are today. That's essentially what his theory argued. Now, how can we link this to this particular quote? The first thing you want to say guys is this. Hyde is not just a bad person. Hide is not just evil, but hy is the opposite of evolution. Hyde is a devolved creature. Hide's going backwards. So, you know how you see that monkey turn into an ape and then the ape becomes a human? hides going that way.
His anger, his species, his creation is not human. He goes against human nature.
Hyde is a incomplete creation. Do you know how all the characters when they meet Hyde, they say that there's something wrong with the guy? He's got a deformity, but we can't sense it. That's this is a deformity. Hyde is devolved.
Hyde is going backwards on the line of evolution. But secondly, how else can we apply this quote? Now guys, whether you believe in the theory of evolution or not, let's put that argument to one side just for the sake of this point for this video, let's just pretend we do.
If we were to believe in this theory of evolution and link it to this core, what does it say about all of the characters?
What does it say about Utterson? What does it say about Lannin? What does it say about Jek? What does it say about all of these characters, guys? It says that every single human being has the tenacity of this uncontrollable rage because once upon a time we were like that as well. Once upon a time we were violent, we were wild, we were aggressive, we were uncontrollable. If you believe in Dharm's theory, then you believe that once upon a time we were that we were an ape. So every human, what is hy showing us? That every human has this animal within them.
It's there just waiting to come out. So when you see hide and you think hide is so bad, hide is so evil. Yeah, but you have that inside you as well. But what's the difference? Jackal/hyde.
Jackal was unable to control the animal within him.
We can control that. But the point is it's there. It's waiting to be unleashed. So let's recap. How could you link this quote to Jackal? Easy peasy guys. Jackekal is unable to control his nature. Jackal is unable to control this side of himself. How could you link it to Hyde? The idea that Hyde is devolved guys Hyde is not a complete human whereas Hyde is regressing.
How could you link it to the wider characters? Guys, it shows us how all the wider characters have this animal tendency within them. You can argue Utterson.
Yes, Utterson isn't violent. Utterson isn't crazy. But look at what the guy does. He literally watches the character of Jackal decline, decline, decline, decline until Jackal is no more. He watches that as a passenger on the side.
Where's his humanity? Where's his emotions? Where's his love? Where's his affection? You can argue utter behaves like an animal, but he's not there banging his chest.
He's not there being violent, but he's there being inhumane.
There's no love. There's no affection even though he treats Jackal like he's a friend. Now how could you link this quote to seti? How could you link it to society? Guys, this quote happens when Hyde murders Saddan Karu. Now who is Saddan Karu? He's a member of parliament.
And this is a very symbolic killing.
It's a very symbolic act that takes place when he hurts the girl in the beginning of the book. He tramples calmly over the girl. But when he kills Sir Danbas Karu, guys, he absolutely obliterates him. He gets the cane and smacks him. And you can hear the bones of Sedan Karu breaking bit by bit, piece by piece.
Why?
Why does he kill this man so aggressively, so violently? You can argue guys that Saddan Karu was a symbol of the ruling elite of society, the member of parliament. He was part of the people that was supposed to be protecting people. He was part of the people that was supposed to be taking care of the affairs of people. But Saddam Basaru and those like him did not promote justice. They promoted injustice. They were the reason why the poor were treated so bad. They were the reason why crime was so bad. They were the reason why there were such a big divide in society.
So could you use a black fury to show how the people that rule society, they're the ones that bring out the bad in us? Nobody is bad.
Nobody wants to be bad. That person who steals from Tesco's, that person who sells a certain substance, could you argue they are pushed there by the rules and the mechanism of society, where they born, the the the circumstances of their schooling, their upbringing.
Now, I'm not making excuses. I'm just trying to pose an argument in your mind.
So, could Ape Black Fury show how society pushed people to the edge?
society was so injust that people like Saddam Karu deserved what they got because they were the ones that were reaping the rewards of this injustice of this inequality of this capitalist setup that existed. So this quote guys a plaque fury is a lovely quote. Yes, the bottom level the bottom tier the low altitude will say that this quote shows that hide is really even but take it a little bit further. There's a lot more you can do with this quote if you argue it correctly. Now guys, the second quote is a very good quote to learn. Why is it a good quote to learn guys? Because it can be linked to form. It can be linked to the Gothic genre. The Gothic genre guys, it used a lot of ghosts and demons and so on and so to make the book scary.
But one other convention of the Gothic genre is the way the Gothic genre uses the weather. The Gothic genre doesn't just do pathetic fallacy. The Gothic genre uses pathetic fallacy, uses the weather as almost an additional character. The weather tells the story and the weather is normally always present throughout a Gothic genre text and this is the case in Jacqueline Hyde.
Now the quote guide that we have is the fog rolled over the city. Does anyone know where in the book this quote happens? This quote happens at the start of chapter 4 just before Hyde kills Lany. Now why is this quote important?
You've got Jacob, you've got Hyde, you've got utter, you've got setting, you've got duality, you've got all these different ways that you could possibly be approached in the exam. Now, how does this quote fit those questions? Let's analyze the quote first. The fog rolled over the city. Not the rain, not the thunder, not the sun, but the weather condition that was chosen was the fog.
The fog slowly came over London. Now, when it's really foggy outside, what happens? Your vision becomes blurred.
You can't see things clearly. You can't see past the fog.
So there could be somebody standing right there waving at you but because the fog is in the way you can't see clearly.
Now why does the fog descend just before hyde batters karu?
First things first guys you can argue here that nature the setting the environment has a dual nature as well.
Jackal and Hyde are not the only dual naturatured characters. Everything in this book is dual naturatured. Even the setting, even the weather.
Why does the fog descend? Why does it roll very slowly over the city before he kills and batters um Saddamus Karu?
Because maybe the fog, maybe nature at this point is on the side of Hyde.
Maybe nature has a dual nature. Maybe nature is aiding hy. Maybe nature is helping hide. The question is why? Why would the nature be helping hide? Why would the fog be helping hide?
Maybe guys.
They are not against what Hyde is about to do. Remember what I said earlier about who Saddam Karu was, about how he was a member of parliament, about what he was supposed to do.
Maybe it's the idea that are we being told that sometimes killing is okay.
Sometimes certain people have to learn a certain lesson in a particular way. And that is why nature aids hy. Nature comes down as a cloak and almost covers hyde while he does what he does. And the moment hy is done the fog is lifted and the fog disappears. That is one way of looking at this quote. The idea of how the duality of nature doesn't just exist in the characters, but this duality of nature also exists in nature itself in the weather and in the setting. Now, how could you link this quote to hide to jackal and so on? This quote is the exchange of power. This is when it is clear that Hyde is in power and that Jackal is losing control. The fog rolled over the city because what happens thereafter is a clear indication that Jackal has lost control and that Hyde is taking control. So through this quote, the power of Hyde is exemplified massively and the loss of control is exemplified when it comes to Jacob. He can't see clearly anymore. He's lost control over Hyde. Hyde's gone. He's covered by the fog. But this quote, guys, is a clear imbalance of power.
It's the clear shifting of power where Jackal loses and Hyde gains that control. Utterson is a bit of a tricky one, right? How do you link this stuff to utter? Guys, you know, why does he never intervene?
From the very beginning of the book, he knows something is up. He's got the will. He's being told that look, this is happening to Jackal. There's a guy going in and out of his house. There's signs, the handwriting. There's signs constantly that something is up.
But why does Utterson never intervene?
Why does Utterson never stick his fork in the ground and say enough is enough?
Even at the end when Utterson does intervene is forced is because Pool goes to get him. If P didn't go and get him, Utterson would never have got involved.
Now, what can we say about Utterson and this quote? There's a fog guy. There's a metaphorical fog that not only exists over the city of London, but it exists in the car in the mind of the characters where reality is covered. Reality is there. They know it's there, but there's a fog that lurks over their mind. And you want to use this quote that throughout the entire play, the fog doesn't just exist in London. This fog, it exists in the minds of the characters where the truth is there, but they pretend they can't see it. They pretend it's murky. And this does some serious damage throughout the text. All right, guys. Quote number three. How is a fire in a forest, guys? Guys, if you don't ever try this at home, but if you light a fire in a forest, guys, that fire spreads quick.
That fire guys spreads super quick and before you know it, you've got a major crisis on your hands. Now this court guys, you've got the simile, you've got the jux position, and we're going to link it to Freud and the id. Now, what are we doing with this court?
You kind of feel sorry for Jackal here, but at the same time, it's too late. And do we think he's right or he's wrong? So when Jackal is describing how Hyde takes control and how he lost control, he describes it like a fire in a forest.
Meaning the evil of Hyde when it came, it came strong and it spread before he could control it and before he knew it, Hyde was in charge and Jezeck had lost everything. But I don't know if that's the case.
He might feel like that. But this is the problem with Jackal, right? In the entire book, Jackal is just chatting poop. Jackekal is in denial. He says for so long, I can control Hyde. I'm in charge. When I want to be rid of Hyde, I can be rid of Hyde. Everything for him is okay. Is okay. Is okay until it's not okay.
There's no there's no transition point.
There's not I'm losing control. Let me bring it back. I'm losing control. Let me bring it back. It's I'm in control.
I'm in control. I'm in control. Oh my god. I'm not in control.
Why did he not read the signs earlier?
Why could he not see what we could see from the moment of trampling calmly to then the ape black fury?
Bro, we What are you looking at?
This is not a fire in a forest. This is a slow burn.
This is a slow, slow, slow, slow burn.
We began in the microwave. Then we ended up on the oven and now we're in the fire in the forest. There was a slow increase of pressure. There was a slow increase of heat. The way Jackekal talks is as though he lost control overnight. No, my friend, you lost control slowly throughout. But the problem is, and this is the illusion of being a slave to your desires, being a slave to your id. You think you're in control before it's too late. Guys, look at drug addicts. A drug addict will not admit he's an addict until it's too late.
I'm in control. I can stop this whenever I want. I'm okay. Are you really are you really in control? And by the time they realize that they've lost control, it's too late, guys. This is the deception of following your desires.
This is the deception of becoming a slave to your id.
You can't see things that everybody else can. You're so focused on one thing that you can't see what other people can see.
You can't stick your head out and realize, hold on, there's something bigger at play here. So guy, this quote when it comes to Jackal, guys, for me, I have no sympathy. This quote shows the deception that Jackal went through.
The guy had lost all sense of reality.
The guy had lost all sense of control.
And the fact that he describes Hyde's takeover like this shows how little control he had.
Jackal didn't lose control at the end.
Jackal lost control many many many many many chapters before.
It's just the fact that the the product of his lack of control came about at the end. So this quote guys shows you the deception the lack of realism that exists in the character of Jac. He's confused. How would you use this quote for hide guys? This quote shows you how the evil hide and the evil in all of us needs to be tamed.
There is something about evil that it tastes so good. There is something about evil that it feels so good. There is something about evil that it just gets too much.
If you don't tame it, think about the first time you did something bad. You must have felt so guilty. But the second time you do it, is anybody watching? The third time you The third time you do it, it kind of feels okay. The fifth, the sixth, by the seventh, eighth time, you've forgotten that it was something bad. It's just become a part of you. is just become second nature unless somebody tames it. Guys, I remember when I was little, right? The first time I swore, the first time I swore, my mom, she held my chin, opened my mouth, got chili powder, and put the chili powder down my mouth. Trust me, I wasn't going to swear in front of her ever again. I don't think I swore after that for a very, very, very long time.
The PTSD was too much. She controlled the fire that would have burnt down her forest.
Now, what's my point, guys? If the evil isn't controlled, it will grow to become so powerful. Just the way Hyde like a fire in a forest, he started off small little flame. But that fire grew and the fire grew and the fire grew until he'd burned down the entire forest. Now, how could you link this quote to setting?
How could you link this quote to society? Guys, the relationship of Jacqueline Hyde is a mirror of how society exists.
Society, as I said earlier, there were major problems. There was a big divide between the rich and the poor. There was this whole idea of reputation. There was this whole idea of duality of, yeah, I'm going to pretend I'm nice. I'm going to pretend I'm a nice good guy, but really I'm a savage. I'm an animal. I'm an evil human being.
And that's over here.
This fire in a forest has taken over a lot of society. Evil has spread. There's classism, there's sexism, there's individualism.
But people pretend they're nice. They'll pretend that the forest is all fine just the way Jakard was. Pretend the forest is all fine until it's too late. Until the forest is completely burning down.
And look at the state of London.
Look at how Jen's house is described from the outside.
It's it's like a prison. But this is the state of society. But people ignore and they ignore and they ignore until it is too late. Guys, this is a really really good quote. It's a very good quote to use because it shows you duality. It can be linked to Jackal. It can be linked to Hyde. It can be linked to the other characters in the manner of how they put off things until it is too late. They pretend everything is fine and they allow the evil to grow and eventually take over. Now guys, this next one, I love this quote. You guys love this quote, but what are we doing with this quote? This quote, guys, is from the beginning of the text and it's when Hyde tramples over the girl and he's walking, she's walking, kaboom, they smack into each other, she falls down. Rather than saying, "Oh my god, I'm so sorry. Let me help you up."
Hyde sees her on the floor and he calmly steps over her. He calmly tramples over her. Take that. Take that. Take that.
Bang. Bang. Bang. And then he carries on with his business. The guy is like a juggernaut. Bang. He smacks into you and then he runs over you. Now you might think, but sir, he what's the big deal?
He's just stepping over the girl. It's not It's not bad thing. Not that bad.
Look at what he does to Saddam's Karu.
This isn't the point, guys. I want you guys to look at how this quote shows the psychology of being evil. If you're evil, it's all you know.
It's all you know.
You can't be nice. Now, why is this quote an oxymoron? Because guys, he's trampling over the girl, right? Think about this. He's trampling over a young girl. He's trampling over a human being.
step by step by step. So the act of trampling is violent, is heartless, is vicious, is aggressive. But the guy is trampling over her as though he hasn't got a care in the world. He's trampling over her calmly. Ah, take that. Take that. Boom. I forgot to kick you there.
He's doing it so nicely, so calmly.
Now, what does this reveal? It reveals guys how evil and how being violent is second nature to hide.
There's no emotion. There's no there's no regret. It shows you the nature of this man and how evil is synonymous with hide.
They go together so well. Now, why is it important that hy tramples over this young girl? I have a view on the two big victims of hide.
Who are Hyde's two big victims in our text? The girl. Other than Jacquel, you've got the girl and you've got Saddam's kuru. The girl represents the poor working class in society and he hurts her but he hurts her in a calm way. Saddamus Karu is a member of parliament and he hurts him but he hurts him in a vicious aggressive destructive manner.
What could we say about the two victims of hiding?
Why does he trample over the girl calmly? Why does he kill Saddamus Kuru so brutally?
I have a small theory guys that the destruction of Hyde is quite symbolic of society and that's how you can link these quotes to society. Hyde tramples calmly over the girl. Do you know why?
Because the society that she lives in would have trampled calmly over her anyway. It would have treated her so bad but smiled at her at the same time where she would never have realized why her life is the way she is. Young girls guys were forced into prostitution. Young girls were forced into child labor. But they never understood why. They never understood that this is because of the government. This is because of the system. This is because of people like Sedan Karu who were abusing the system.
So the entire system at the time was trampling calmly over poor workingclass people especially young girls and then he kills and batters Sedanas Karu to show us the injustice of society. So could you argue that the way Hyde treats his victims is a mirror of their crimes in society and how society should treat these people? The girl he treats her the way he does because that is how society would have treated her anyway. They would have trampled over her but they would have said we love you care for you. you're the way you are because of your own circumstances, not because of us. Society would have trampled calmly over that girl anyway.
Now, how could this quote be linked to the character of Jackal? Guys, it shows us that Jackal from the very beginning had no control. Jackal from the very beginning was a weak, weak character who became a slave to his desires from the outset. How could this quote be linked to Utterson? Guys, Utterson at this moment in time understands that this has something to do with Jekal, but he ignores this idea of reputation, of protecting your friends. It destroys society. And that is how you can link it to this particular quote. The next quote that we're going to be looking at is, "My new power tempted me until I fell in slavery."
The idea of the power tempting him is personification. We're going to link it to Freud and we're going to put the symbolism of the slavery in this court.
Look at how Jackal refers to Hyde, my new power.
It's a bit interesting, isn't it?
He's almost viewing Hyde as a positive.
He loves it.
Yes, it goes bad from this point onwards. My new power.
He's like Thanos with a new ring on his finger. The ring of hide.
Now, what does this quote show us, guys?
That Jackal loved it.
Jackal, this is the irony, guys. This is the irony of this quote, and this is where I believe you're going to get the highest grade. Jacel became a slave before he became a slave. Look at what he says. My new power tempted me until I fell in slavery.
But you don't see it, man. You don't see that you were a slave to hide before you realized you were a slave to hide. The moment you created Hyde, you were a slave to him. The fact that you had to create an entire being to house your evil side, to house your duality of nature, to house your bad feelings and your bad actions.
You were a slave before you know it. You wanted to be bad so bad. You wanted to be evil so bad that you created a whole new creation to become and put all that evil into. If you are not a slave to the devil, if you are not a slave to your evil side, what are you guys? This quote shows you how duality is so deceptive.
Duality is so deceptive. We as humans need to recognize that we have the ability to do good and to do bad and that at all times we need to control this. What separates a good person from a bad person? We've all had thoughts that we should not have. We all think things that we should not be thinking.
But what separates a good person from a bad person? A good person can control and suppress these thought these thoughts. Whereas a bad person, they can't.
Those thoughts they grow until they become actions. And those actions they grow until they become a part of you. So guys, this quote presents Jackal as an unknowing slave. It presents Jackal as a victim.
He fails to understand that he was a slave before he realized. How could you link this quote to Hyde? Guy, this quote shows you the magnificent, deceptive, manipulative nature of Hyde.
Hide dangled the carrot.
Come on, let's trample over the girl.
Ah, that felt amazing.
Bang, bang, bang. I want to do it again.
I want to do it again. Hide dangled the carrot again.
Until Jal completely lost control. The master became the slave and the slave became the master.
And this quote shows us guys, remember hyde is a symbol of all of our evil side. And Jackal is supposed to be a symbol of our good side. This quote guys shows us the importance of controlling height. The importance of controlling our evil nature. Because if we're not careful, it will take over without us realizing at all. My new power tempted me until I fell into slavery. Slavery is a good way to talk about guys, but even the idea of tempting.
There is something about a human nature that sometimes doing things that we shouldn't do feels invigorating, feels powerful.
And it shows you guys the dangers that exist in society. There's always a a battle in society of controlling everyone's desires, everyone's it.
Otherwise, if we can't, there'll be absolute chaos. There'll be absolute anarchy that exists within society. So guys, this quote is a lovely quote. Use it for Jekal to show us how Jekal is clueless about what's going on. Use it for duality. That duality of nature is never 50/50.
There's always going to be one side that has more control than the other. Which one wins is up to you and how you control it. And for Hyde guys, it shows how Hyde played the long game. This deceptive, this manipulation, this evil side took came out very very slowly until he took complete control. And that is where the power of Hyde and the power of evil comes into the text. And guys, it shows you how if you do not control your id, you have no chance at all. All right, guys. These polar twins should be continuously struggling. Bang bang bang bang bang.
This is the symbol of the text, right?
This is the the the pillar of Jacquel Hyde that the whole book is a continuous fight between good and bad. Now I link this quote guys to Cain and Abel. Now, I don't want to go too deep into the religious side, but essentially guys, if you believe or if you ever read the Bible or you've read any other religious text, the two sons of Adam were Cain and Abel. If any of you guys ever watched WWE, Undertaker and Cain were built upon the story of Cain and Abel from the Bible.
And Cain and Abel were the sons of Adam.
And the story goes that one of the brothers became jealous of the other brother and he ends up killing his brother. That's there's a obviously more detail, but I've brought it down to the base level that the two brothers, one of them becomes jealous of the other one and he ends up killing him because his jealousy grows and grows and grows. Now there's a there's a constant struggle here, right? These are the two sons of Adam. But there's a constant constant battle until the evil side wins.
Guys, that's Jacqueline Hyde.
The story of Jack and Hyde is a mirror to the story of Cain and Abel. Now, let's go back to the quote. The quote reads, "These polar twins should be continuously struggling."
should be. If you are going to be okay in life, then there will be a constant battle between your good side and your bad side, between your good side and your bad side. Sometimes you might do something you regret, but you fix it straight away and you try to be better and then you might fall short, but you keep trying. There's a constant battle.
But the moment one of them gives up, the other one takes full control.
The moment one gives up, the other one takes full control. And in this quote, the writer sets a precedent of almost what life is about. Life is one long struggle between this duality, between good and bad. So Utter, Jackal, Hyde, Lion, society, every single person in our text is constantly battling, constantly battling.
And this quote shows us guys the importance of engaging within that battle. This is a very interesting point guys. Sometimes we see the evil side as let me stay away from it. No, no, no, no, no. You got to take the evil side from the scruff of the necks and you got to hold it and you got to shake it and you got to be willing to fight it. But the moment Jackekal gives up, the moment you give up, the moment Utter gives up, the moment the people in society give up, they are finished. This polar twin will take over and finish and take over. This polar twin guys will take over and evil will consume society.
Evil will consume you as a person. So this quote shows us guys how there has to be the need for good and bad.
We need Jacel. We need Hyde. We need everyone in society to be constantly battling with these two sides. And this quote guys therefore shows you the importance of a duality of nature. We all have it. But it's really really important because the good in us reminds us of the evil and the evil in us reminds us of the good. You know, it's a bit weird, right? We live in a world right now on Tik Tok. People do some crazy things for views and for clout.
People will be willing to act like a complete idiot. People will disrespect their parents. People will do weird and wonderful pranks. People will dress in a particular way. People will say things in a particular way. But everyone, not everyone, hyperbole, a lot of people have lost shame, have lost selfrespect, have lost a standard.
There's not really a standard anymore.
They all they care about is views or do whatever you want as long as you get views.
There's no shame. There's no selfrespect. There's nothing. It's all disappeared. But there was a society guys where reputation mattered, where selfrespect mattered, where how people viewed you matters. Today we go bonkers.
Today we believe I don't care what he thinks of me and we see that as empowering. No, no, no, no, no. There's a level of self-respect that must exist.
Reputation to some extent is important.
You will never catch me doing stupid things for views because I hold myself to a certain standard. Now here Jackekal says I concealed my pleasures. And everyone uses this quote normally to say how this quote shows us how in a Victorian society reputation was important and reputation is what led to the downfall of society because everyone tried to be something that they aren't.
Fine, I get that. That's one way you can take this quote. But another way, guys, you can take this quote is it shows you how sometimes it's important to conceal your pleasures. Because if everyone just did whatever they wanted with no boundaries, with no self, with no self-control, with no shame, guys, there would be no order in society.
There would be no order in the world.
So this quote guys shows you the battle between living for yourself and living among society. If we're going to look at this quote for just the character of Jekal or just the character of Hyde or just the character of Utter then yes you can argue that Jackal is oppressed is oppressed. Why? Because these people have to always conceal hide what they truly want.
So that's the first part. You can argue that the carropus are victims.
Jackekal's a victim of the Victorian society. Addison's a victim of Victorian society. Hide is the emancipation. Hide is the creation of this Victorian society of people trying to conceal their pleasures.
But at the same time, this quote shows you the importance of concealing your pleasures when you live in a society.
The moment Jackal stopped concealing his pleasures, what happened, guys? It wasn't good. It was absolute anarchy. It was destruction. If we're going to live in society and live harmoniously, we have to not always care about my pleasure. We have to look at everyone around us. Just because you feel like doing something doesn't mean you can. If you only care about yourself, yeah, fine. Crack on. But to exist in a society, you cannot be individualistic.
You must think about, okay, what are the consequences of my actions?
How will that affect mom and dad? How will that affect my friends, my family, my community? So this quote, guys, there's a bit of a juosition. Yes. On one hand, concealing your pleasures is a good thing, but on the other hand, it's a bad thing. And that's what I would like you to battle with inside this quote.
All right, guys. The last one.
This quote, guys, it reminds me of a pitbull.
Devouring a piece of meat, just staring at it and licking its lips, and the salivating saliva dripping straight off the mouth.
the animal within me licking the chops of memory. We've got zomorphism, we've got foreshadowing, and we've got Freud and the id. Here, guys, Jackal talks about um his desires. Jackal talks about his feelings. Jackal talks about his his his his love for being evil, his love for doing something bad. And he describes his evil side, hide as the animal within me.
Remember guys, at the very beginning we spoke about ape like fury. This and that can be linked quite well. It's as though the devolved version, the ape version, the animal version of hide of of jackal is hide. That is always there. What did I say earlier guys? That we all have the tenacity. We all have the ability to do evil. Our evil side is always there within us. But Jackal compares it to an animal.
Licking the chops of memory. Now what will an animal eventually do, guys?
Right? Put a piece of meat in front of an animal.
What will the animal eventually do?
It'll devour the meat. It'll absolutely destroy it.
What does this quote foreshadow? This quote foreshadows that Jackal is on the verge of losing control. The animal is going to win. Do you know why? Because the animal is licking its lips. The animal hasn't backed down. The animal hasn't given up. The animal is waiting to attack. The animal is waiting to feast. So this quote guys for me shows three things. Number one, it shows the power of hide. Number two, it shows the power of our evil side if not controlled. And number three, guys, it shows the lack of control that Jackal has. And it shows the battle that Jackal is going through. He likes that feeling.
He's trying to control it, but he likes that feeling so much. Now guys, we have these eight chords. And remember guys, on the day of your exam, you only need two of these to fit because the other two quotes we will be getting from the extract. Now, I've tried to link these quotes to as many of the questions that I can think of. We got jackal, hyde, society, setting, utter, duality of nature.
I've been talking through those questions as I've been talking about the courts. Here's my advice to you guys now. Go to everythingeducation.co.uk, click on past papers, and look at the past paper question. You're going to get an extract. Plan two paragraphs based upon the extract and then plan two paragraphs using two of these quotes.
Train yourself to become good at these quotes. If I had to pick guys my favorite quotes, the ones that I believe can be used for lots of different questions. Yes, it's all of them, but I would I like a black fury. I like the slavery one. I like trampled calmly. To be honest with you, Jack and Hyde is one of the easier texts because there's not a lot of variables when it comes to the questions. It can be about evil and good and duality, but there's not a lot they can talk about. That's why it's easier finding quotes that can fit lots of different questions. All right, cool guys. I shall end this video here. As always, take care of yourselves. It's been Mr. Everything English.
Peace.
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