Respuesta :
Answer:
1. Carew’s murder provides Mr. Utterson with a reason to search Mr. Hyde’s house and learn more about him.
3. Mr. Utterson finds evidence on the victim that further ties Mr. Hyde to Dr. Jekyll.
5. Inspector Newcomen and Mr. Utterson find items that suggest Mr. Hyde has committed other crimes.
Explanation:
The excerpt to which the question makes reference, comes from the chapter where the author narrates the death of Mr. Carew. At this point, Mr. Utterson was already aware of Mr. Hyde's existence in regards to his mannerism and physical appearance. However, this crime scene left a good amount of clues that tied Mr. Hyde to Dr. Jekyll. First of all, there was a witness who saw the physical appearance of the killer, which reassembles Mr. Hyde's, and, secondly, the walking stick was left on the crime scene; this directly tied the murderer to Dr. Jekyll. All of these instances, gave the inspector reason and evidence to search Dr. Jekyll's home.
Mr. Utterson arrives at the crime site with a police officer. He recognises Sir Danvers Carew's body and the broken walking stick as one he had given to Dr. jekyll years previously.
Correct options are A, C and E.
Mr. Utterson has reason to explore Mr. Hyde's residence and learn more about him after a maid witnesses Mr. Carew's murder and recognizes his murderer as Mr. Hyde. They discover a letter addressed to Mr. Utterson at a Crime scene, as well as half of the cane used as a murder weapon, tying Mr. Hyde to Dr. jekyll even more. Mr. Utterson went there with police to look for Mr. Hyde or some evidence because he already knew Mr. Hyde's address. A cheque book were discovered, implying that Hyde had committed another crime.
To know more about chapter 4 of the strange case, refer to the link:
https://brainly.com/question/10598907