ENGLISH 7_Q4_LESSON 2_ Employing a Variety of Strategies for Effective Interp...
Wuthering Heights Essays
1. Wuthering Heights
Emily BrontГ«, known for her novel Wuthering Height, was inspired for her writing through her
siblings from a young age. BrontГ« was born in Yorkshire, England in 1818. She had one younger
sibling, Anne, and four older ones, Maria, Elizabeth, Charlotte, and Patrick Branwell. When BrontГ«
and her family moved to Haworth in West Yorkshire, Maria and Elizabeth both died of tuberculosis.
Emily was raised in the rural countryside in solitude, which provided a background for her Gothic
novel, Wuthering Heights. When Emily, Charlotte, and Patrick were younger they would act out
stories creating a fantasy realm in the rural countryside. (Krueger, Christine). In the 1840s, the three
sisters, Emily, Charlotte, and Anne, had written poetry throughout...show more content...
Edgar and Isabella Linton are proper, spoiled, and civil. They are brought up from a very high class
standard and are taught to always act with proper manners. Isabella later marries Heathcliff, which
ends up ruining her life. Cathy Linton, daughter of Edgar Linton and Catherine Earnshaw, is sheltered
from the outside world and compassionate towards Linton Heathcliff's illnesses and Hareton
Earnshaw ignorance in education. The symbolization of each settlement defines the characters that
lived in those houses. These two settlements relate to how Catherine Earnshaw cannot choose
between Edgar Linton and Heathcliff. She is attracted to Edgar's social grace and civility, but also
drawn into Heathcliff's wildness. Also the two settlements relate to how Cathy Linton is gentle and
civil to the two boys at Wuthering Heights, Hareton Earnshaw and Linton Heathcliff, who are both
wild and manipulative towards her. The two love triangles, one in each generation, affect the
Earnshaw and Linton families causing emotional, physical, self–inflicting, and psychological
suffering
In the first generation of Earnshaws and Lintons, Catherine Earnshaw is the root suffering for
Edgar Linton and Heathcliff. Catherine's rebelliousness shows the feminist writing to BrontГ« in
such a patriarchal society. Catherine is torn between her love for Heathcliff and also social
acceptance. She realized that if she were to marry Heathcliff, they would be beggars and she would
not live a first class
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2. Wuthering Heights Essays
Wuthering Heights
In the first chapter of the book the reader gets a vivid picture of the house Wuthering Heights from
Lockwood's descriptions ""wuthering" being a significant provincial adjective, descriptive of the
atmospheric tumult to which its station is exposed in stormy weather." It quickly becomes clear that
Wuthering Heights portrays the image of its surroundings, the desolate Yorkshire moors fully
exposed to the elements.
It is not only the house that displays the environment that envelops the place it is also the occupants
and things inside the house that deliver the symbols of the raw emotion and the exposure to the
cruelty (storms) that so much resembles the weather and...show more content...
The setting is a more civilised one than that of Wuthering Heights. This is seen when Cathy and
Heathcliff run to Thrushcross Grange for the first time, they could see that it was "a splendid place
carpeted with crimson–covered chairs and tables, and a pure white ceiling bordered with gold."
The windows in Thrushcross Grange are large suggesting to the reader that visitors are welcome.
The opposite is true of Wuthering Heights as Lockwood describes the windows in chapter 1 "the
windows are deeply set in the wall."
The Grange is shown as being refined, courteous and protective; this is reflected in the occupants
of the Grange. Edgar and Isabella have been invited to stay at Wuthering Heights, the reply has a
condition: "Mrs Linton begged that her darlings might be kept carefully away from that naughty,
swearing boy." (Nelly Chapter 7). This protective nature is also seen in the second generation but
more strongly as Edgar forbids Cathy to go and visit Wuthering Heights at all. Edgar is described
by Heathcliff as a "lamb," but this soft attribute that is typical of the Grange is not always a flaw of
character "No mother could have nursed an only child more devotedly than Edgar tended her."
(Nelly Chapter 13) Although the Grange thinks itself superior to the Heights "they had not the
manners to ask me to stay,"
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3. Wuthering Heights
Themes– Enviromental, Class, Love, Male vs. Female, Revenge
Chap 10
* Enviromental Lockwood became sick for four weeks
(This happened to the lintons as well whenexposed to the enviroment.)
* Enviromental, class, Male vs. Female Heathcliff enters the parlor, Nelly says that he looks mature,
not like his youthful roughness.
(Heathcliff has escaped the lower class "roughness" imposed on him by Hindley, but retains his wild
nature.)
Chap 11
* Enviromental, Class, Revenge Nelly stops by Wuthering Heights as she is walking past on some
other mission and sees Hareton, who starts harrasing her. Hareton tells her that Heathcliff taught him
to curse and he wont let him get educated. Heathcliff comes out, and Nelly runs.
(Heathcliff's doing...show more content...
Female Nelly goes to visit wuthering heights, but Edgar refuses to send a token of forgiveness with
her.
(Edgar doesnt respect her the same because shes a woman.)
* Enviroment, Love, Male vs. Female Nelly refuses to help Heathcliff, but after he claims he'll keep
her hostage at wuthering heights, she agrees to carry a letter to Catherine for him. (Heathcliff is
willing to do whatever it takes to get what he wants.)
Chap 15
* Love Heathcliff tells Catherine that he can forgive her for what she did to him, but that he can not
forgive her for what she did to her self.
(This shows that Heathcliff loves Catherine with devotion, even more than he loves himself.)
*Love Nelly gets Heathcliff to leave the room, but she promises to send word of her in the morning.
Heathcliff says he'll be in the garden.
(This shows, yet again, Heathcliffs devotion for her.)
Chap 16
* Enviromental, Love After Heathcliffs, Nelly finds that he replaced a lock of Edgars hair in the
locket on nellys necklace. Nelly then finds that lock of hair, and ties the two together. (The two
locks symbolize her personalities, Devious and civilized.)
* Male vs.
5. Wuthering Heights
In the gothic novel, Wuthering Heights, a man named Lockwood rents a manor house called
Thrushcross Grange in the moor country of England in the winter of 1801. Here, he meets his
landlord, Heathcliff, a very wealthy man who lives 4 miles away in the manor called Wuthering
Heights. Nelly Dean is Lockwood's housekeeper, who worked as a servant in Wuthering Heights
when she was a child. Lockwood asks her to tell him about Heathcliff, she agrees, while she tells
the story Lockwood writes it all down in his diary. Nelly worked at Wuthering Heights for the
owner, Mr. Earnshaw, and his family. One day Mr. Earnshaw leaves for Liverpool and comes back
with an orphaned boy. Catherine and Hindley – the two Earnshaw children, can not stand...show
more content...
The most obvious example is when Catherine marries Edgar, even though she loves Heathcliff, so
she can have a better social status. Another example is the when "young" Catherine is forced to
work as a servant at Wuthering Heights after she marries Heathcliff's son Linton.
" I lingered around them, under the benign sky; watched the moths fluttering among the heath and
harebells, listened to the soft wind breathing through the grass, and wondered how anyone could
ever imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that quiet earth." (Bronte p. 406) This quote was
beautifully written and leaves the reader on awe.
Wuthering Heights is in the same ethical and moral tradition as the other great Victorian novels.
Its criticism of society is as fierce as Charlotte Bronte's or Dickens'. Much of the same spirit
interfuses the novels of Charlotte and Emily Bronte. For both writers, society and what passes for
civilization are synonymous with selfishness. Both show family life as a sort of open warfare, a
deadly struggle for money and power. Both see organized religion as ineffective or hypocritical or
so cold and harsh as to be inhumane and deflected from true Christian ideals. The characters in
Charlotte Bronte's first two novels have to face many of the same problems confronting the
characters in Wuthering Heights, and they reach the same conclusions. Both William Crimsworth (in
The Professor) and Jane Eyre reject the master–slave
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