Enfield recalls helping to catch the little man and brings him back to the corner, where a doctor and the girl's parents have gathered. Finally, Enfield describes the little man, named Mr. Hyde, in such a strangely evil way. Enfield describes, "Something downright detestable. I never saw a man so disliked, and yet I scarce know why"(5). Enfield recollection illustrates the good versus evil within Mr. Hyde, himself.
The evil of Dr. Jekyll, who is also Mr. Hyde is depicted through the violence of Mr. Hyde. Nearly a year later Sir Danvers Carew, a respected member of London society, is murdered. A maid saw someone she recognized as Mr. Hyde. Suddenly, Mr. Hyde broke out in anger and attacked the other man, brandishing him with a cane and trampling him to death. After the maid fainted in response, she called the police a few hours later as she wake up. The police found on the body of the victim only a purse, some gold, and a letter addressed to Mr. Utterson. Subsequently, the police contacted Mr. Utterson who identified the body as Sir Danvers Carew. Mr. Utterson then takes the police chief, Professor Newcome, to the home of Mr. Hyde. At the home of Mr. Hyde, the police find the rooms ransacked, clothes strewn everywhere, half of the can used to murder Danvers Carew and a half-burnt checkbook. The police, however, were unable to find Mr. Hyde anywhere, or a track of his past. Sanderson critique's the violence of the novel as he states "As a counterpoint to these sharply focused images of violence, the delineation of Utterson's character is equally economical and graphic; unsmiling, unsentimental, austere, but tolerant of the peccadilloes of others, and inclined always to help rather than to reprove; a mean of complete probity and conscience in matter of trust" (Sanderson 1). The duality of human nature is shown in the character of Jekyll, the baser side of whose nature is fascinated by Hyde. But the latter is a distinct and separate person from the Doctor, and furthermore individual of entirely pure evil.