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Wuthering Heights Essay Research Paper When Wuthering

Wuthering Heights Essay, Research Paper


When Wuthering Heights was published it was blasted it?s contemporaries as


obscene. They railed that Catherine and Heathcliff were the most immoral and in


general worst people they had ever had the misfortune of reading about. Although


Wuthering Heights has taken it’s rightful place as masterwork of 19th century


literature and Emily Bront? has receive credit for her work, it is still


possible to see where the early attacks are based. Heathcliff especially behaves


in a very obtuse manner. The basis for this behavior is Heathcliff’s bizarre


love/hate relationship with Catherine. His frustrated desire to be with her


causes him deep personal pain, which he transfers to other characters in a


sadistic attempt to force them to feel that pain as well. Heathcliff and


Catherine’s relationship is neither stable nor in any way normal. Instead it is


full of violent emotions which are either soaring high or dashingly low, with


very little between the two. Catherine declares that she and Heathcliff


"Whatever souls are made of, his and mine are the same"(73).


Heathcliff desires nothing more than to be with Catherine, but their


relationship is undermined by the revelation that Catherine feels that "it


would degrade me to marry Heathcliff . . ."(73). Heathcliff was unsuitable


to Catherine because he is poor with no family. However, Edgar Linton has both


and for those shallow reasons Catherine marries Edgar betraying Heathcliff?s


feelings for her and her own feeling as well. Catherine had hoped to marry Edgar


but also to keep on loving Heathcliff as well, to "have her cake and eat it


too". The violence, hatred, love, and passion of Catherine and


Heathcliff?s relationship is encapsulated in their "conversation" on


Catherine’s deathbed: He [Heathcliff] could hardly bear, for downright agony, to


look into her face. . . . She was fated, sure to die. ?Oh, Cathy! Oh, my life!


How can I bear it??[Heathcliff speaking] . . . . . . . . . . . . [Catherine


speaking,]?I shall not pity you, not I. You have killed me? and thriven on


it, I think. . . How may years do you mean to live on after I am gone? . . . . .


. . . . . . . I shouldn?t care what you suffered. I care nothing for your


sufferings. Why shouldn?t you suffer? I do!? . . . . . . . . . . . . [Heathcliff


answers,]?You know you lie to say I have killed you: . . . I could as soon


forget you as my own existence! Is it not sufficient for your infernal


selfishness, that while you are at peace I shall writhe in the torments of hell?


. . . . . . . . . . . . How cruel you?ve been?cruel and false. . . . . . . .


. . . . . I have not broken your heart?you have broken it; and in breaking it


have broken mine. . . . What kind of living will it be when ? oh, God! Would


you like to live with your soul in the grave??(147-48) Love and hate are so


closely entwined that they are both expressed in a single sentence. No one wi

ll


call that exchange ?normal? but it contains the essence of their


relationship. Despite the barbs of blame for the situation being thrown there is


no doubt that Catherine?s death pains Heathcliff to the very soul. Heathcliff


becomes determined to share the pain caused by Catherine’s betrayal and her


death. The victims of his deranged vengeance are Isabella Linton, Edgar Linton,


Linton Heathcliff, and Catherine Linton II. "The more the worms writhe, the


more I yearn to crush out their entails!"(140). Clearly a sadistic attitude


and one that makes it absolutely clear that Heathcliff’s marriage to Isabella is


a revenge on both Catherine and Edgar. The marriage of Heathcliff to her


sister-in-law is emotionally damaging to an already frail Catherine. Edgar, who


despises Heathcliff throughout the novel, is shock and very nearly disowns his


sister for marrying a ruffian like Heathcliff. So Heathcliff gets vengeance on


Edgar as well. Poor Isabella is caught with a man who does not, in fact never,


loved her. She writes Nelly, "". There is another motivation for the


marriage: money. Though his marriage with Isabella Heathcliff has placed himself


in line for not just money, but Edgar Linton’s money. With Catherine and


Isabella’s deaths and the birth of Catherine II and Linton Heathcliff,


Heathcliff continues his manipulations into another generation. The forced


marriage between first cousins Catherine II and Linton, with all is a


accompanying duplicity, is a the final act of revenge. The subsequent deaths of


Edgar Linton and Linton Heathcliff leave Wuthering Heights and the Grange in


Heathcliff’s possession. The vengeance is complete: Heathcliff has everything


dear to Edgar, his property and his daughter; the younger Catherine, because he


could not control her mother and he may feels that shre should have been his and


Catherine?s daughter; and Hinley’s son is turning out to be another Heathcliff.


Complete victory for Heathcliff, but then a strange thing happens: Heathcliff


starts to mellow. He seems to realize that however complete his vengeance it


gets him no closer to Catherine, her shade still wonders the moors. Heathcliff


professes to Nelly, "she has disturbed me, night and day, through eighteen


years" (264). It is when Heathcliff prepares to spent eternity with


Catherine that he final finds peace, with her and himself. Catherine?s coffin,


buried for eighteen years, is dug up and a panel removed so Heathcliff?s


remains can mingle with her?s. With Heathcliff?s death there is at last


peace at Wuthering Heights. He and Catherine are together for all time. The


property, both Wuthering Height and the Grange have been returned to their


rightful owners Hareton Earshaw and Catherine II. Heathcliff had schemed to


leave her destitute, but she will end up with both properties after her marriage


to Hareton. A full circle has been completed and everything is as it should be,


finally.

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