Cabinet Hall Kitchen Cellar Garden
| |

Chapter 2
...a large, low-roofed comfortable hall, paved with
flags, warmed (after the fashion of a country house) by a bright open fire, and furnished
with costly cabinets of oak.
Chapter 5
Dr Jekylls house had been in the past a garden till the
building was indifferently know as the laboratory or the dissecting-rooms. Now the own
tastes of the doctor being rather chemical than anatomical, had changed the destination of
the block at the bottom of the garden. The structure was dingy and windowless; the tables
laden with a chemical apparatus, the floor strewn with crates and littered with packing
straw, and the light falling dimly through the foggy cupola. At the further end, a flight
of stairs mounted to a door covered with red baize.
Chapter 8
The far greater proportion of the building was occupied by the
theatre which filled almost the whole ground storey, and was lighted from above, and by
the cabinet, which formed an upper storey at one end and looked upon the court. A corridor
joined the theatre to the door on the by street; and with this the cabinet communicated
separately by a second flight of stairs. There were besides a few dark closets and a
spacious cellar. [
] Each closet needed but a glance, for all they were empty and
all, by the dust that fell from their doors, had stood long unopened. |