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Wuthering Heights

Wuthering Heights is a novel of revenge and romantic love. It tells the stories of two families: the
Earnshaws who live at the Heights, at the edge of the moors, and the genteel and refined Lintons who live
at Thrushcross Grange. When Mr. Earnshaw brings home a foundling to live in the family, complex
feelings of jealousy and rivalry as well as a soulful alliance between Heathcliff and Catherine develop.
Believing that he has been rejected by Catherine, Heathcliff leaves to make his fortune. When he returns,
Catherine is married to Edgar Linton, but she still feels deeply attached to Heathcliff. Disaster follows for
the two families as Heathcliff takes revenge on them all. Only the second generation, young Cathy and
Hareton Earnshaw, survive to go beyond this destructive passion in their mutual love.

Structurally the novel is rich and complex. There are two generations of characters, and the themes and
relationships of the first generation are reflected in the second but with differences that increase our
understanding. Brontë ’s use of point of view leads to many questions about the narrators who control the
unraveling of events. It is as if the main characters are seen through a series of mirrors, each causing a
certain amount of distortion. Without an omniscient voice controlling sympathies, the reader must get
inside the characters’ minds, the one telling the story as well as the one about whom the story is being
told. Probing this complex web of relationships and motives leads to intense psychological analysis, and
in this way the novel mirrors life itself. Learning occurs in pieces and is always subject to revision.

The themes of Wuthering Heights should appeal to the teenage student. The various power relationships
involved with romantic love and vengeance depicted in the novel are also a part of the high school
students’ social milieu. Teachers who make relevant connections between the themes and characters of
the novel and the students’ own preoccupations will find this novel opens up discussion of many of the
students’ concerns. The exercises suggested in this guide are designed to promote such connections.
More activities and questions are offered than can be used so that teachers can choose those that help
make reading and discussing the novel a meaningful experience for students.

OVERVIEW

List of Characters

The Earnshaw Family

Hindley Catherine Heathcliff The Linton Family


| Edgar — Isabella
Hareton m. m.
Young Catherine marries Linton
Catherine Earnshaw Heathcliff
Heathcliff, but after the deaths of
Linton and Heathcliff, she marries | | Hareton.
Young Catherine m. Linton
Ellen (Nelly) Dean—the housekeeper and "stepsister" of
the Earnshaw children. Nelly is raised with the children and
serves them for over twenty years. She knows intimately the history of the family.

Joseph—servant to Heathcliff
Zillah—servant to Heathcliff

Kenneth—the doctor

Mr. Lockwood—tenant at Thrushcross Grange who becomes intrigued with the Earnshaw family history.
Ellen Dean is his housekeeper.

Synopsis

The novel can be divided into three main structural divisions for greater clarity in reading: Prologue,
History of the Family, and the Epilogue.

Prologue:

Chapter 1: 1801 – Lockwood, the new tenant at Thrushcross Grange, pays a visit to his landlord, Mr.
Heathcliff at Wuthering Heights. Lockwood finds himself strangely attracted to a man who seems even
more reclusive than he.

Chapter 2: Curiosity leads Lockwood to make a second visit the next day. This time he is snowed in and
has plenty of time to discover the relationships among the occupants of the house: a young refined
woman; a young man, obviously used to hard labor; and Heathcliff. Lockwood begins to have doubts
about Heathcliff’s character when he sees him react savagely to the young woman.

Chapter 3: Lockwood is put up for the night in one of the unused bedrooms which was the girlhood room
of Catherine Earnshaw. There he discovers the books and writings of Catherine from the time when her
brother Hindley was the master of the house. Lockwood falls into a fitful sleep with dreams that turn into
nightmares. His cries arouse Heathcliff who thinks it is the ghost of Catherine calling out to him. After this
sleepless night, Lockwood vows never to bother his neighbors again.

History of the Family:

Chapter 4: That evening, reviving a bit, Lockwood engages his housekeeper, Mrs. Dean, who had served
the Earnshaws for many years, in a conversation about the inhabitants at Wuthering Heights. Mrs. Dean
begins the history of the family at the time that the old master Mr. Earnshaw brings a foundling, later
named Heathcliff, home to be raised as his own child. Catherine and Heathcliff become close friends, but
Hindley's resentment at his father's protective attitude towards Heathcliff soon turns into hatred.

Chapter 5: Hindley is sent off to college, and the strong bond between Catherine and Heathcliff grows as
they are left to themselves to roam about the countryside. The child Catherine is full of energy and high
spirits, which often puts her at odds with her father.

Chapter 6: This tranquil time is changed by the death of Mr. Earnshaw. Hindley returns for the funeral
with a new wife and takes his place as master. He banishes Heathcliff from the family, requiring him to
give up his education to work as a servant. Still Catherine and Heathcliff manage to sneak away for
rambles on the moor. On one of these excursions, they spy on the Linton family at Thrushcross Grange.
When the watchdog bites Catherine's leg, she is attended by the Lintons while Heathcliff is sent home in
disgrace.

Chapter 7: Five weeks pass before Catherine returns home. She is a changed person, in appearance
and manners. She now acts the part of the "lady." Heathcliff, meanwhile, has grown more ragged and
dirty. Catherine still feels close to Heathcliff and doesn't understand why he resents the changes in her.
But Heathcliff envies Edgar Linton, his appearance and prospects with Catherine, and resolves to
revenge himself on Hindley, no matter how long it will take.
At this point, Mrs. Dean interrupts her story, wanting to move on more quickly. Lockwood insists that she
continue in the same style, not leaving out any details.

Chapter 8: Mrs. Dean continues the story of the Earnshaw family. It is now the following summer, and a
baby boy is born to Hindley and his wife. Mistress Earnshaw, who is sickly and consumptive, dies within
the year, and the child, Hareton, is raised by Nelly Dean. Hindley gives in to desperate and dissipated
mourning for his wife.

Catherine, at fifteen, tries to balance her relationship with both the Linton children and Heathcliff. This
causes difficulties for her since neither side likes the other. She is still Heathcliff's constant companion,
but he has turned into a boorish, uncultivated person. Piqued by the situation, Catherine quarrels with
Edgar, but it leads, paradoxically, to closer intimacy between them.

Chapter 9: Catherine, seeking advice, confides to Nelly that Edgar has asked her to marry him, and she
has accepted, even though she is convinced that it is Heathcliff she really loves. However, she cannot
marry Heathcliff, given his social situation, and she thinks marriage to Edgar will secure Heathcliff's
future. Unknown to Catherine, Heathcliff has overheard most of this conversation, except for Catherine's
declaration of love for him. Heathcliff steals out of the room and leaves the countryside. Catherine is
devastated by his loss and becomes seriously ill. Three years pass without any word from Heathcliff, and
Catherine marries Edgar. This ends the first part of Mrs. Dean's story.

Chapter 10: Lockwood becomes sick from his walk in the snow. It is four weeks before he is well enough
to ask Mrs. Dean to continue the story.

Edgar and Catherine enjoy a "honeymoon" period, but it ends with the return of Heathcliff. He is
transformed into a tall, muscular, athletic, and mannered man. Catherine is overjoyed to have him back
and insists that Edgar, who is of course jealous of her feelings for Heathcliff, accept him into the family.
Edgar's sister, Isabella, becomes infatuated with Heathcliff and accuses her sister-in-law of monopolizing
him. Catherine mocks Isabella's feelings by embarrassing her in front of Heathcliff. She doesn't change
Isabella's mind, but instead plants an idea in Heathcliff's mind that such a marriage would enable him to
inherit all the Linton lands. Meanwhile, Heathcliff is staying at Wuthering Heights with Hindley Earnshaw,
who, regardless of the danger, has included Heathcliff in his nightly card games, hoping to win some
money from him.

Chapter 11: On Heathcliff's next visit to the Linton's, he meets Isabella in the garden and kisses her.
Catherine is very put out and quarrels with Heathcliff. There is a violent scene between Edgar and
Heathcliff when Edgar orders him never to come to the house again. Catherine becomes so upset that
she locks herself in her room.

Chapter 12: By the time Catherine lets Nelly into her room, she is sick from fever and delirium.
Concerned with Catherine's health, the family doesn't realize, until it is too late, that Isabella has eloped
with Heathcliff. Nelly had discovered her absence earlier but told no one, wanting to spare the family more
confusion and pain.

Chapter 13: Catherine suffers through a long illness but slowly begins to recuperate. Meanwhile Isabella
and Heathcliff return to Wuthering Heights. Heathcliff's cruel and evil nature is now apparent to Isabella.

Chapter 14: Nelly goes to Wuthering Heights to see Isabella, even though her brother considers her "lost"
to him and insists on no communication between the two families. However, Heathcliff desires to see
Catherine again and forces Nelly to play his go-between. He says Edgar can never love Catherine as fully
as he does and implies that he would kill Edgar if he thought Catherine wouldn't miss him. Nelly finally
gives into his threats and agrees to carry a letter to Catherine.
There is another pause in the narrative. When the story picks up again, Lockwood is the narrator, telling
the story in Mrs. Dean's "own words."

Chapter 15: Catherine is physically and mentally altered by her illness; she is listless and withdrawn,
clearly marked for an early death. Heathcliff realizes this as soon as he sees her. She accuses him of
having broken her heart and torments him with her prediction that he will live to forget her. She wishes
that they would never be parted, and refuses to release her hold on him even when her husband enters.
She falls into a faint from which she never awakens.

Chapter 16: That night a premature infant, young Catherine, is born and Catherine Linton dies. Heathcliff,
who has kept a vigil in the garden, knows she is dead before Nelly comes to tell him. He begs Catherine
to haunt him, not to leave him alone in this world.

Chapter 17: The next afternoon, Isabella, who is running away from Heathcliff, stops at the house and
describes the violent fight between Hindley Earnshaw and Heathcliff. She is bleeding from a knife wound
to the head, brought on by her own taunts to Heathcliff that he murdered Catherine. Her son, named
Linton, is born a few months later, south of London.

Six months later, Hindley Earnshaw, just 27, dies. It is discovered that Heathcliff owns all the Earnshaw
land. Earnshaw's son, Hareton, is penniless, completely depended on Heathcliff for everything.

Chapter 18: Twelve years pass. Young Catherine, called Miss Cathy, has grown up, never going far from
home. Isabella, near death, calls Edgar to her side so she can entrust her son Linton to him. Cathy, tired
of waiting for her father, decides to do some exploring on her own and ends up at Wuthering Heights.
There she meets Hareton who is now eighteen and learns that he is a cousin. She is upset to discover
this unlikely connection, but agrees to keep her visit a secret.

Chapter 19: Edgar returns home with his nephew, a "pale, delicate, effeminate boy." Linton is sickly and
frail and quite moody, but Cathy is hopeful of making him a pet, soothing his nerves by taking care of him.
However, Heathcliff demands that his son be sent to him immediately.

Chapter 20: The next morning Nelly takes Linton to Wuthering Heights. Heathcliff's plan to own all the
Linton land through his son's inheritance now becomes apparent. He values the boy for this alone and will
not harm him, even though he considers him a puny, weak thing.

Chapter 21: Time passes pleasantly until Cathy's sixteenth birthday. In a ramble over the moors, she
meets Heathcliff, who invites her to his home to meet his son. He confides to Nelly that he wants the two
cousins to fall in love, so as to avoid any legal questions when Linton inherits the property of his uncle.

Cathy, refusing to believe her father's description of Heathcliff's character, sets up a secret
correspondence with Linton. When Nelly discovers the notes, she forces Cathy to stop writing at the risk
of her father's displeasure.

Chapter 22: At the end of the summer, Mr. Linton gets cold that he can not shake off, and the family
begins to fear for his health. Heathcliff, passing on the road one day, meets Cathy who has been on a
walk. He accuses her of playing with young Linton's feelings, saying the boy is so depressed that he has
made himself sick enough to die. Cathy insists that she must see for herself, and Nelly gives in, hoping
that Linton's behavior will prove the falseness of Heathcliff's words.

Chapter 23: They find young Linton more frail and sickly than before. He also complains at Cathy's
treatment of him, repeating his father's accusations against Mr. Linton. He demands that Cathy continue
to visit him to cure him. Nelly protests that the visits must not be repeated.
Chapter 24: Nelly becomes sick and is laid up for three weeks. During this time, Cathy continues her
secret visits to Linton in the evenings. When Nelly discovers her secret, Cathy describes her visits and
her attempts to amuse Linton, usually without good results. Every time Cathy wants to end the visits, the
boy blames his ill nature on his sickness. Mr. Linton insists that the visits be stopped.

Chapter 25: The narrated events of the novel have now reached just one year before 1801, the year
Lockwood first came to Wuthering Heights. Edgar Linton, who feels he is dying, fears that young Linton
Heathcliff is only a tool of Heathcliff's revenge and forbids any more visits between the cousins. However,
he allows them to write each other. Edgar realizes that Cathy will be left without an inheritance unless she
marries Linton Heathcliff.

Chapter 26: Young Linton is also quite ill, failing rapidly. He hardly has the energy to visit with Cathy, but
his fear of his father makes him beg her to come again the next week.

Chapter 27: On the next visit, Linton is even more abject terror, saying he cannot enter the house without
Cathy. Heathcliff has devised a plan to kidnap Cathy and not release her until she marries Linton, even
though he knows that her father is near death. In the morning, Cathy is taken to be married while Nelly is
kept locked up.

Chapter 28: After five days, Nelly is released and returns to the Grange to find Mr. Edgar near death.
Cathy manages to break out of Wuthering Heights just in time to comfort her father in his last hours.

Chapter 29: The evening after the funeral, Heathcliff arrives at the Grange to demand Cathy's return to
Linton's side. He tells Nelly that he has had Catherine's grave opened and has made plans to be buried
next to her when he dies so that their dust can mingle. Heathcliff is still haunted by Catherine. He feels
her spirit, but he is in torment because she refuses to show herself.

Chapter 30: Young Linton dies, and Cathy is forced to continue living at Wuthering Heights. Heathcliff
now owns all the Earnshaw and Linton property. This chapter concludes Mrs. Dean's story.

Chapter 31: Lockwood, felling much better after his long illness, rides over to Wuthering Heights to tell
Heathcliff that he doesn't intend to stay on at the Grange at the end of his year. Not much has changed
among the members of the household. Cathy is still obstinate and continues to badger Hareton. But there
are slight changes in Heathcliff; he is more restless, anxious, and troubled than Lockwood has seen him
before.

Epilogue

Chapter 32: Eight months pass. In September, Lockwood is in the vicinity of the Grange and decides to
visit Wuthering Heights to pay off his account. He learns that Heathcliff has been dead for three months.
Nelly describes how Cathy and Hareton were reconciled and became fast friends, while at the same time
Heathcliff became more and more estranged from the family.

Chapter 33: Nelly continues the tale. Heathcliff hardly notices what is happening around him. When
Cathy stands up to him, he is caught by the look in her eyes that reminds him of Catherine. Hareton also
closely resembles Catherine. Heathcliff realizes that everywhere he looks he sees reminders of
Catherine. He is tormented and haunted by his desire to be reunited with Catherine.

Chapter 34: These are the last days of Heathcliff. He stops eating and sleeping; he restlessly roams
through the countryside and home, seeing Catherine wherever he looks. Finally, Nelly discovers him in
Catherine's bed, dead. He is buried as he wished, next to the grave of Catherine. Now the country folk
swear that his restless spirit still walks.
Young Catherine and Hareton will be married on the new year and move to the Grange to begin their life
together, leaving behind the ghosts of Catherine and Heathcliff.

Chronological History of the Linton and Earnshaw Families

1772: Old Mr. Earnshaw finds a starving, orphaned child in the streets of Liverpool while on a business
trip and brings him home to be raised with his children – Hindley, fourteen, and Catherine, six; the child is
christened Heathcliff.

June, 1778: Hareton Earnshaw, Hindley's child, is born.

1780: Heathcliff leaves Wuthering Heights.

1783: Edgar Linton marries Catherine Earnshaw.

1784: Catherine Linton dies and her baby Catherine is born. Isabella runs away from Wuthering Heights
after the funeral of Catherine; Linton, son of Isabella and Heathcliff, is born in the south, near London.
Hindley Earnshaw dies.

1801: Catherine Linton and Linton Heathcliff are married. Edgar Linton dies. Linton Heathcliff dies within
weeks of his uncle's death.

April, 1802: Heathcliff dies.

by Emily Brontë

Page 2 of 5

ABOUT EMILY Brontë

Emily Brontë lived most of her life in England on the North Yorkshire moors like those depicted in
Wuthering Heights. Not many details are known about her life. As one Brontë scholar stated, "Next to her
genius, the most astonishing thing about Emily Brontë is the silence which surrounds her life." Charlotte
Brontë declared that Emily's "disposition was not naturally gregarious; circumstances favored and
fostered her tendency to seclusion; except to go to church or take a walk on the hills, she seldom crossed
the threshold of home. Though her feeling for the people [all around] was benevolent, intercourse with
them was never sought; nor, with very few exceptions, ever experienced."

Emily Jane was the fifth of six children born to the Reverend Patrick and Maria Brontë on July 30, 1818, in
the village of Bradford, Yorkshire. Three years after Emily was born, her mother died of cancer, the first of
several tragedies that would befall the Brontë family. Just before Emily's sixth birthday, she and her older
sisters – Maria, Elizabeth, and Charlotte – enrolled at the Cowan Bridge School. Maria and Elizabeth both
fell ill, and on May 6, 1825, Maria succumbed to her illness. The other three girls then left for home, where
Elizabeth died two weeks later.

In June 1826, Mr. Brontë returned from traveling with a set of twelve wooden soldiers for Emily's brother,
Branwell. Led by Charlotte and Branwell, the Brontë children created imaginative stories, poems, plays,
and games about a magical world they created for "The Twelves," as they called the soldiers. They
founded a kingdom on the African coast with a city named Great Glass Town, complete with a
government, newspapers, magazines, generals, poets, historians, publishers, and actors. Their
adventures were recorded in tiny booklets, often less than two inches square, in minute handwriting. One
hundred of the booklets – whose wordcount is equal to the total published works of the three sisters –
have been preserved.

Charlotte discovered Emily's poems in October 1845 and convinced her sisters to collaborate on a
volume of poetry. They chose to use pseudonyms to avoid the criticism and prejudice often directed
towards women writers. In May 1846, Poems (by Currer, Ellis, and Acton Bell) was published, with the
Brontës paying for the costs; only two copies were sold.

Emily began working on Wuthering Heights in December 1845. She completed it in July 1846 and began
submitting it for publication (along with Anne's Agnes Grey and Charlotte's The Professor). In December
1847, the publisher T. C. Newby published Wuthering Heights. One year later, on December 19, 1848,
Emily died from the effects of a severe cold. Two years later, Wuthering Heights was reissued, along with
a selection of Emily's poems and a biographical notice by Charlotte.

About Emily Brontë, Virginia Woolf wrote that she had the ability to "tear up all that we know human
beings by, and fill these unrecognizable transparencies with such a gust of life that they transcend
reality. ...She could free life from its dependence on facts; with a few touches indicate the spirit of a face
so that it needs no body; by speaking of the moor make the wind blow and the thunder roar."

BEFORE READING THE NOVEL

Teaching Wuthering Heights

Informal Reading Inventory

For classes in which there is a wide range of ability levels teachers might first determine the suitability of
Wuthering Heights for individual students. The novel may prove frustrating for some because of its difficult
vocabulary and complex sentences. Also, the length of the novel may appear daunting to slow readers.
An informal reading inventory will enable teachers to assess their students' ability to read and understand
the novel. The inventory is essentially an open-book quiz that measures how well students can identify
the meanings of words in context and understand a brief section of text. The example inventory that
follows can be modified as appropriate for individual classes. It is designed to take about 30 minutes.

Informal Reading Inventory

The purpose of this inventory is to allow you to demonstrate how you respond to Wuthering Heights. This
is not a test! But please do your best; your effort will help determine your daily grade.

A. Vocabulary: Define the words in bold listed below as clearly as you can. Circle your answers.

1. Too stupefied to be curious myself, I fastened my door and glanced round for the bed. (dazed,
overwhelmed)

2. I perceived it to be a sort of couch, designed to obviate the necessity for every member of the
family to having a room to himself. (eliminate, avoid)

3. In vapid listlessness I leant my head against the window...till my eyes closed. (a state of being
without energy)
4. We were hoping that Joseph might give us a short homily. (sermon, religious instruction)

5. I insist on perfect sobriety and silence! (seriousness, peace)

B. Comprehension: Now read a selection from the novel beginning on p. 24 and ending with the words
"right place" just before the break on p. 27. Record your start and finish times, and then answer the
questions below. You can refer back to the text if you wish. After finishing the comprehension section, go
back to the vocabulary section and re-answer any questions that you think you missed. Then answer the
questions below.

Start time:_________Finish time:__________

1. After the narrator enters the bedroom, he approaches a large oak case. What does he do with
it? (He enters it and closes its panels.)

2. What antique volume did the narrator's candle scorch? (A New Testament of the Bible which
belonged to Catherine.)

3. Why did Heathcliff and Catherine have to have a prayer service with Joseph? (It was Sunday
and too flooded with rain for them to go to church.)

4. Who is the tyrant that threatens Catherine and Heathcliff? (Hindley, Catherine's brother.
Joseph, the servant, also acts cruelly toward them.)

5. What does Hindley do to Heathcliff in order to "reduce him to his right place?" (Hindley won't let
Heathcliff sit or eat with the rest of the family or play with Catherine.)

6. What do you infer are Hindley's motives for acting the way he does to Heathcliff? (Hindley
resents how his father had favored Heathcliff.)

To compute the speed of reading, divide the number of words in the passage by the number of minutes it
takes to complete the reading: 1280 words/____minutes=____words per minute. This figure will give the
teacher a general sense of a student's speed of reading the novel and, since there are about 360 words
per page, how long students will take to read specific assignments. Four minutes per page or more is very
labored reading; 1.5 to 2 minutes per page is about average for high-school students.

The inventory reveals the students' ability to recognize the meanings of words in context by giving
students an opportunity to re-answer the vocabulary questions after reading the passage. The
comprehension questions mainly assess students' ability to follow the plot of the story; only the final
question is interpretive.

Responding to Students' Needs

If students have a slow reading speed and miss more than three vocabulary questions and more than two
comprehension questions, it may mean that they will experience great difficulty in reading this novel. For
these students, teachers should seriously consider whether their goals can be met in a better way through
alternative novels. The related readings bibliography includes selections with themes related to those of
Wuthering Heights, but who are able to profit from working with it, can engage in activities designed to
make the novel more accessible to them. These activities which are marked with an * are included among
the Before, While, and After Reading the Novel sections.

BEFORE READING THE NOVEL


Wuthering Heights is a complex novel which evokes strong responses – both positive and negative – from
readers. Students who are prepared for the narrative strategies employed by Brontë as well as the
significant themes will be better able to truly judge their reactions to the novel. Connecting the novel to the
students' own experiences from the beginning will also lead to more evaluative thinking and greater
interest in the story and characters.

*View a video version of Wuthering Heights before reading the novel to provide a basic familiarity with the
plot structure before reading and analyzing the novel.

Point of View

The chronology of Wuthering Heights is carefully planned, but the narrative time does not flow in an
unbroken line from the past to the present. Rather it shifts between the present and the past and then
back again several times. There are also shifts in point of view. The novel begins with Lockwood's
recounting of his year at the Grange, then shifts to Nelly Dean's remembrances, and at times a third voice
reports on an event at which Nelly was not present. It would be useful to prepare students for reading the
novel by reviewing how point of view shapes the story we receive.

If you have already discussed point of view in other fiction, you can begin by having students freely write
about how point of view affects a story. Students can list some of the works of fiction they have read and
describe the point of view in each. Then they can speculate about how the story would change if it were
told by another character. Students can share these writings with a partner and then small groups can
make newsprint charts of the types of point of view with which they are already familiar and the way point
of view affects the story and the reader's reaction to a story.

If you have more time, you might want to have students engage in several activities that demonstrate
point of view. Here are some activities addressed to students; you should select and improvise as
appropriate. Note: All specific activities, suggested in this guide, will be addressed directly to students.

1. Read a short story with a complex point of view; for example, "A Rose for Emily" by William Faulkner.
Discuss in small groups how the point of view affects the reader's understanding of Emily and her lover.
How would the story be different if told by Emily or Homer Barren?

2. Role play how point of view affects a person's response to a story. In groups of three, act out one of the
following scenarios: two girls fighting about a boyfriend; two parents setting up a curfew with a son or
daughter; two students stopped for a traffic ticket. Each person acts out a definite role in the action. Then
the actors leave the room. Each one comes in separately and tells the story of what happened. After this
exercise, freely write or discuss as a group how point of view affected each individual's story. The class
can interview each person and ask: How were you feeling? What was going on in your mind? After this
activity, you should be able to compose a statement about how point of view affects a story and what
readers or viewers need to think about when hearing or reading a story filtered through another person's
consciousness.

3, Read a brief newspaper article and rewrite it from different points of view. Then read your versions
aloud and talk about how they are different and why.

4. Take an historical event, such as the voyages of Columbus, and speculate how point of view affects
the historical account of the event. What would Europeans say about the voyages of Columbus? How
would Indians tell the story of the arrival of Columbus and his men? There is a children's picture book,
Encounter by Jane Yolen, illustrated by David Shannon (Harcourt, 1992) which demonstrates the Indian's
point of view quiet effectively.
5. Look at several photographs or paintings and talk about the artist's point of view when composing the
picture. What did the artist choose to include, to emphasize, to frame? How do these choices affect the
impact of the photograph on the viewer?

Themes

Before reading the novel, it is helpful to have students think about and discuss some of the themes they
will encounter.

Theme #1: Family history and family relationships or sibling rivalry:

1. Wuthering Heights is the history of two families and how an outsider tries to reconstruct that history. In
order to begin to understand this theme in the novel, think about your own family history.

a. Make a brief genealogical chart of three generations of your family: grandparents, parents, children.

b. Make a list of important details of about your family to include in a history.

c. Discuss: What did you leave out of your history? Why? What kind of information is difficult to explain to
an outsider?

2. Much of the conflict in the novel arises from the struggle of the three Earnshaw children for their
father's love. Think about sibling rivalry in literature and in your own experience.

a. Recall or tell the story of King Lear or the fairy tales, "Beauty and the Beast" or "Cinderella." Why do
the sisters in the stories quarrel? How does one's place in a family affect behavior in positive and
negative ways?

b. Read one of the young adult novels suggested in the bibliography. How do family embers in the novel
relate to each other?

Theme #2: Romantic or ill-fated love:

Wuthering Heights is about the love between Catherine and Heathcliff. Students can better evaluate this
relationship if they consider their own notions of love first.

a. Examine modern day depictions of love by looking at magazine articles, music, movies, soap operas,
or popular literature. Bring in the lyrics to a love song or several magazine articles about "love." Recall the
plot of a film about love. As a class distinguish between the various types of love depicted in modern
culture; e.g. romantic, married, platonic, fulfilled and unfulfilled, and sensual love. List the characteristics
of each type of love. Is there a type of love which is least often depicted in modern culture? What is it?
Why?

b. What does it mean when lovers say they are one – no longer two separate persons? What happens
when someone becomes "love sick"?

c. Read one of the young adult novels suggested in the bibliography. Examine how it depicts the theme of
romantic or ill-fated love.

d. Here are some lines from the novel. Predict the speaker's character and the speaker's attitudes about
love:
1) "He shall never know how I love him; and that, not because he's handsome...but because he's more
myself than I am. Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same." (Catherine)

2) "If he loved with all the powers of his puny being, he couldn't love as much in eighty years as I could in
a day." (Heathcliff)

Theme #3: Revenge:

Much of the action of the novel recounts Heathcliff's revenge against the Earnshaws and Lintons and
raises questions about the effects of revenge.

1. Review the stories of novels, plays or films that have a revenge theme; such as Hamlet, Moby Dick,
The Count of Monte Cristo, and Medea or films such as Amadeus, Fatal Attraction, and Cape Fear. Read
a short story or parable in which a character seeks revenge (for example, the section on feuds in Twain's
Huckleberry Finn or Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado.") As a class, discuss: Is revenge ever justified?
What is the effect of revenge on the person who carries it out? How can a wronged person secure
justice?

2. Find a newspaper story about a crime committed with a motive of revenge. Speculate about what the
wronged person was seeking. How will this person be affected if they get revenge? Will they be changed,
and how? Will the person be satisfied?

3. Freely write about an act of revenge that you have witnessed or experienced. Speculate about he
questions asked in #2.

Theme #4: Nature versus Civilization:

There is a distinction in the novel between the behavior of the Earnshaws which is driven by elemental or
natural forces and the actions of the Lintons which are mannered, proper, and socialized. You can get
students to begin thinking about this theme by asking them to define what it means to be natural versus
civilized and how definitions of each of these states are culturally determined.

1. Think about the "back to nature" idea in our culture. Why do people like to get away to the wilderness?
What do they hope to recapture in themselves when they immerse themselves in the natural world? What
do we lose by living civilized lives? What do we gain?

2. Make a collage which contrasts the natural and civilized world. Freely write or discuss: what differences
exist between the two worlds?

3. Read one of the young adult novels listed in the bibliography. Discuss how it addresses the them of
nature vs. civilization.

Mood

The descriptive passages in the novel create the mood. From the opening – "one may guess the power of
the north wind blowing over the edge, by the excessive slant of a few stunted firs at the end of the house;
and by a range of gaunt thorns all stretching their limbs one way, as if craving alms of the sun" to
Lockwood's final lingering stroll in the graveyard, Brontë creates a world which is often somber,
depressing, and dark. To prepare students to understand how description creates mood, you may choose
one of these exercises.

1. Look at pictures of the moors in English travel books. Freely write about how it would feel to live near
the moors.
2. Look at photographs and paintings of Haworth and the surrounding countryside in biographies about
Emily Brontë and her family. Describe your feelings as you look at these pictures.

Historical Background

In order to understand the context of the novel, have students gather background information about life in
nineteenth-century England. Topics to consider are Victorian life and manners, the impact of the industrial
revolution on English town life, the class system, medical practices, life expectancy, family life, and the
role of women.

by Emily Brontë

Page 3 of 5

WHILE READING THE NOVEL


Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights

Here are several activities for individuals and small groups that will focus and sharpen students' reading
and understanding of the novel.

1. *Focus on reading the more significant sections of the novel and replace the other sections with
chapter summaries such as those in the beginning of this guide. Alternatively, write the summaries and
share them with the rest of the class. (Note to the Teacher: The student summary writing can be done
cooperatively in pairs of a more able and a less able student.)

2. *Generate in class a running plot line of the material covered each day. Use the plot line to make
predictions about what will happen next in the novel as preparation for subsequent reading. Also use the
plot line as a basis for asking more analytical questions about character motivation and actions.

3. * Follow a systematic strategy in handling difficult vocabulary words in the novel, such as:

a. Try to figure out the meaning of the word

1) from the meaning of the sentence or paragraph,

2) from examining it for familiar parts.

If there is still too much uncertainty, then

b. Look up the word in a dictionary and choose the meaning most appropriate to the context.

If the word is one to worked on further, then

c. Record the word and its meaning in a vocabulary notebook.

Because there are so many potentially unfamiliar words in this novel, apply steps b and c only to those
words that are necessary to getting the basic story line.
4. *Use a reading strategy while reading Wuthering Heights aimed at reading efficiently and effectively:

a. Skim the chapter to get a feel for the main developments in the plot by reading the first
sentence of each paragraph.

b. Go back and read the chapter swiftly. If you encounter difficulty, just read on. The meaning will
gradually become clearer as you read.

c. Answer the questions given by the teacher or generated by the class by skimming to find the
relevant section in the text and reading that section carefully. Use a word attack strategy to
identify the meanings of all unfamiliar words in that section so that you have a thorough
understanding.

5. Construct a plot line for each of the stories in the novel: the story of Lockwood's brief tenancy at
Thrushcross Grange; and the history of the Earnshaw and Linton families. Consider the connection
between these two stories. How does one plot mirror the other? What is the action of the Lockwood plot?
Compare it to the action of the Heathcliff plot?

As you are reading, watch for the event that marks Heathcliff's loss of drive towards revenge. Speculate
about why this happens. Does it have anything to do with an identification between Hareton and himself
as a young man? Or is it connected to associations stirred by Lockwood's stay in Catherine's old room?
Another intriguing question is the relationship between Lockwood and Heathcliff. Why did Brontë choose
to begin the story with Lockwood? In what ways do the two characters mirror each other?

6. An important consideration in this novel is how much we trust the perceptions of the narrators,
Lockwood and Nelly Dean. Make a list of the actions of these characters. Compare your list with a partner
and analyze how the character's actions reveal motives and attitudes.

At crucial times in the story, Nelly actually knows more than the other characters or otherwise significantly
affects the action and outcome of events. While reading, list all the actions caused by Nelly. Begin to think
about the meaning of her involvement in the action. What doe it tell the reader about her? Do we trust her
story of the family histories?

Questions

The novel can best be read and discussed according to the significant divisions outlined in the synopsis:
the prologue, the history of the family, the epilogue. These questions and activities can be used for whole
class and small group discussions as well as adapted for journal or free writings.

Prologue – Chapters 1-3

1. What is Lockwood's first reaction to Heathcliff? What connections does Lockwood think exist between
them? What do Lockwood's comments about Heathcliff tells us about him? (Lockwood thinks that he and
Heathcliff are alike, both misanthropists. Lockwood is afraid of human involvements and attachments,
which is why he has chosen to live in such an isolated place as the Grange. In a perverse way he seeks
out Heathcliff's company because Heathcliff wants to have nothing to do with him.)

2. How does the opening set the tone for the novel? Note the use of words like solitary, misanthropist,
and desolation in the first paragraph. What mood does Brontë create with these words? (Sense of
mystery, isolation)

3. How is the description of Heathcliff significant? ("He is a dark-skinned gypsy in aspect, in dress and
manners a gentleman.") Note identifications between Heathcliff and animals in the opening scene. (Even
Heathcliff identifies with his dogs – "Guests are so exceedingly rare in this house that I and my dogs, I am
willing to own, hardly know how to receive them.")

4. After his second encounter with the inhabitants at Wuthering Heights, what conclusions does
Lockwood begin to draw about their characters? (Heathcliff is savage; Cathy is a witch; and the rough
Hareton is ready to fight at any imagined slight.)

5. Why is Heathcliff so moved by Lockwood's dreams? (This passage initiates one motif in the novel: The
importance of dreams as a pathway to associations and knowledge not available to the rational mind.
Students should watch for other references to dreams: Catherine's dream of being returned to her
childhood room; Nelly Dean's fear of dreams. There is a connection between "elemental" natures like
Catherine's and Heathcliff's and the subconscious world of dreams. How could Lockwood's account of his
dream be the catalyst that diverts Heathcliff from his revenge?)

Synthesis: Prologue – Chapters 1-3

Discuss the significance of each of the following quotes. In what ways do these quotes begin to shape our
understanding of the characters or the themes of the novel?

1. "Mr. Heathcliff forms a singular contrast to his abode and style of living. He is a dark-skinned gypsy in
aspect, in dress and manners a gentleman." (This description suggests the two side of Heathcliff's nature:
the sensuous, natural man over which has been superimposed the manners and niceties of the social and
civilized world.)

2. "Terror made me cruel; and, finding it useless to attempt shaking the creature off, I pulled its wrist on
the broken pane, and rubbed it to and fro till the blood ran down and soaked the bedclothes." (Lockwood's
nightmare reveals his fear of human relationships; instead of helping the poor, wandering child, he
desperately wants to free himself from its grasp. Lockwood doesn't want the demands that come with
relationships.)

3. "Come in! Come in!...Cathy, do come. Oh do – once more! Oh! my heart's darling! Hear me this time,
Catherine, at last!" (Lockwood overhears Heathcliff's anguished plea to Catherine to reveal herself. What
is Heathcliff feeling at this moment? How does this speech compare with the portrayal of Heathcliff so far
as a misanthropist, a man who doesn't have any feelings?)

History of the Family

This section covers chapters 4 through 31 in the novel. Because these chapters fall fairly consistently into
units of three chapters each, we have subdivided the reading and discussion questions accordingly. The
reading can be assigned in small or large units, and the questions adapted for class discussion or journal
writing.

Chapters 4, 5, 6

Early history of the Earnshaw family

1. What are Heathcliff's origins? How does Heathcliff fit into the family? (Heathcliff is abandoned on the
streets of Liverpool; although he is older than Catherine at the time Earnshaw brings him to live with the
family, he never refers to his childhood. The deprivation and alienation of this period mark his character
and explain why he is unable to form loving relationships. Heathcliff becomes Earnshaw's favorite,
Cathy's close friend and soul mate, and Hindley's rival.)
2. How is Catherine described by Nelly? Is there any suggestion that Nelly is exaggerating or
emphasizing certain traits over others? (Nelly describes herself as a "faithful servant," who is partial to the
master. When she judges Catherine as unruly, it's because she makes too much trouble for Mr.
Earnshaw. Also Nelly feels somewhat equal to Catherine since she has been raised as a member of the
family and she doesn't like to be ordered around by Catherine. Resentment and jealousy characterize
Nelly's relationship to Catherine.)

3. How does Hindley treat Heathcliff when he returns as master of the home after his father's death? (He
makes Heathcliff take the role of a servant, deprives him of an education, and tries to limit his interactions
with Catherine.)

Synthesis: Chapters 4, 5, 6

How do these quotes help us to understand the characters?

1. "I found that they had christened him `Heathcliff;' it was the name of a son who died in childhood, and it
served him ever since, both for Christian and surname." (The name "Heathcliff' suggests nature: the
heath and the cliff, the moors and the rocks. It is also significant that Heathcliff does not have a proper
surname; his identity or legal connection to the family is not legitimized. He will always be an outsider.)

2. "He complained so seldom, indeed, of such stirs as these, that I really thought him not vindictive. I was
deceived completely, as you will hear." (Nelly continually fails to understand Heathcliff's true character
even though his actions repeatedly disappoint her expectations. Why?)

3. "Her spirits were always at high-water mark, her tongue always going – singing, laughing, and plaguing
everybody who would not do the same." (Nelly's description of Catherine indicates high spirits, but not
necessarily bad behavior. Nelly complains that Catherine is not more sensitive to the feelings of others,
but her behavior seems natural for a child. Think about Nelly's point of view. She would be about the
same age as Catherine but she had a lot more responsibilities. Why might Nelly resent Catherine's
freedom and place in the family? Compare this to Nelly's description of Heathcliff: "He seemed a sullen,
patient child, hardened, perhaps to ill-treatment.")

4. "It is but a boy – but he scowls so plainly in his face; would it not be a kindness to the country to hang
him at once, before he shows his nature in acts as well as features?" (This quote shows the emphasis
upon outward appearance revealing the inner nature of a person. Heathcliff's features show he will be a
villain. The teacher might ask students to talk about the self-fulfilling prophecy and how character
judgments work upon a person to create behavior.)

Chapters 7, 8, 9

The triangle of Catherine, Heathcliff and Edgar Linton

1. How is Catherine changed by her stay at the Lintons? (She acquires the manners of a lady and enjoys
nice clothing and the society life of the Lintons.)

2. What are Heathcliff's reactions to these changes in Catherine? (He envies Linton his blond good looks,
his social standing and inheritance; he vows he will have revenge on Hindley for depriving him of his
status and equality to Catherine.)

3. How does Hindley react to his wife's death? What connections can you see between his and
Catherine's and Heathcliff's behaviors? (Hindley's excessive sorrow matches the extreme behavior of all
the Earnshaws. Compare his actions to Linton's reaction to Catherine's death.)
4. How does Catherine feel about Heathcliff? (The students should closely examine Catherine's speeches
on pp. 82-84.)

Synthesis: Chapters 7, 8, 9

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I shall not stand to be laughed at, I shall not bear it?" (Heathcliff's pride begins to erect barriers
between him and Catherine. Note: this passage should be should be returned to later to compare how
Hareton reacts to the taunting of Cathy and Linton.)

2. "It struck me soon...there would be more sense in endeavoring to repair some of his wrongs than
shedding tears over them." (Here is another instance of Nelly's loyalty to Heathcliff. She is prepared to
overlook his ill nature because she sees him as the underdog. There is an identification in Nelly's mind
between herself and Heathcliff. Students might begin to consider how Brontë manipulates our feelings
towards Heathcliff. Why might we feel Heathcliff has been wronged? How does Brontë sustain our
sympathy for Heathcliff?)

3. "Catherine and he were constant companions still as his seasons of respite from labor, but he had
ceased to express his fondness for her in words, and recoiled with angry suspicion from her girlish
caresses, as if conscious there could be no gratification in lavishing such marks of affection on him."
(Heathcliff is constantly aware of the distance between their two stations in life and distrusts Catherine's
affection. What effect do you think this distrust will have on their relationship? To what extent should
Heathcliff distrust Catherine?)

4. "I've dreamt in my life dreams that have stayed with me ever after, and changed my ideas; they've
gone through and through me, like wine through water, and altered the colour of my mind." (This is the
dream that Nelly refuses to hear. What could it be? What clues are there in Catherine's speech?)

5. "Nelly, I am Heathcliff! He's always, always in my mind – not as a pleasure, any more than I am always
a pleasure to myself, but as my own being." (Catherine sees herself and Heathcliff as one. Does she love
Heathcliff or her self in him?)

Chapters 10, 11, 12

Catherine and Edgar Linton's Married Life

1. In what ways is Heathcliff changed when he returns to Wuthering Heights? Why does he return? (Great
physical changes are evident, but it soon becomes clear that he is not reconciled to losing Catherine. He
begins to plan to revenge himself on the whole Earnshaw and Linton clan.)

2. What is Catherine's reaction to Isabella's infatuation with Heathcliff? (Jealousy, irritation; Catherine
does not want to share Heathcliff with anyone. She embarrasses Isabella in front of Heathcliff.)

3. How does Nelly interfere in Catherine's affairs and how does she react to Catherine's hysteria and
prediction that she will become dangerously ill? How culpable is Nelly for not informing Edgar about
Catherine's illness? (Nelly actually precipitates the violent confrontation between Edgar and Heathcliff
when she reports to Edgar the quarrel between Heathcliff and Catherine about Isabella.)

4. When Catherine becomes dangerously ill, to what time in her life does her mind return? Why?
(Girlhood: a time of unrestrained emotions, a time when she was not caught in a conflict between the two
sides of herself which are represented by Edgar and Heathcliff.)
Synthesis: Chapters 10, 11, 12

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I've fought through a bitter life since I last heard your voice, and you must forgive me, for I struggled
only for you!" (Heathcliff has done everything to make himself worthy of Catherine.)

2. "Tell her what Heathcliff is – an unreclaimed creature, without refinement, without cultivation; an arid
wilderness of furze and whinstone." (Can we trust Catherine's description of Heathcliff to Isabella? What
are her motives? If this is a true description, why is she attracted to him? If they are "one" as she said
earlier, what does this say about her?)

3. "You are welcome to torture me to death for your amusement, only allow me to amuse myself a little in
the same style, and refrain from insult as much as you are able." (Heathcliff resents Catherine's' marriage
to Linton and the way she tries to control him. He recognizes her manipulation and would like to pay her
back for some of his suffering.)

Chapters 13, 14, 15

Catherine's Illness

1. Why does Heathcliff elope with Isabella? What does she discover about his nature? (Heathcliff sees
Isabella as a tool to work out his plan of revenge against Linton. He feels total aversion for Isabella who
reminds him of his rival.)

2. What happens when Catherine and Heathcliff meet again? (They both blame each other for the failure
of their relationship. Catherine accuses Heathcliff of killing her and Heathcliff asks "Why did you betray
your own heart, Cathy?")

Synthesis: Chapters 13, 14, 15

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I have no pity! I have no pity! The more the worms writhe, the more I yearn to crush their entrails! It's a
moral teething; and I grind with greater energy, in proportion to the increase of pain." (Heathcliff has lost
all human feeling; he enjoys the suffering of his victims. Juxtapose this speech with his declarations of
"deep" love for Catherine. Can he love only one person and despise everyone else? Can Catherine and
Heathcliff create a universe of love which excludes everyone else?)

2. "I thought I prevented another explosion by my compliance; and I thought, too, it might create a
favourable crisis in Catherine's mental illness." (Nelly justifies her compliance with Heathcliff. How
culpable is she in this decision?)

3. "Because misery, and degradation, and death, and nothing that God or Satan could inflict would have
parted us, you, of you own will, did it." (Heathcliff blames Catherine for their broken hearts; his life will be
a living death without her.)

Chapters 16, 17, 18

Aftermath to Catherine's Death


1. What is Nelly's first thought after the death of Catherine and the birth of a baby girl? What does this
continue to show about her feelings for Catherine? (She expresses no sorrow. Check her reactions when
Catherine falls into a faint on p. 159. She is concerned about the master being left without an heir. It is
cold-hearted but consistent with her attitude towards Catherine for Nelly to be worrying over legal
considerations at this moment.)

2. What is Heathcliff's reactions to Catherine's death? (Anger and desolation.)

3. What is Isabella's response to Heathcliff's misery over the death of Catherine? How much satisfaction
does she enjoy? (She taunts and torments Heathcliff that his love killed Catherine, but she is not satisfied
with Heathcliff's suffering since she has not had a direct hand in causing it.)

4. What type of person is the child Cathy? How is she like or unlike her mother? What is her reactions
when she first meets Hareton and learns he is her cousin? (Nelly describes Cathy's childhood. Cathy
seems to be a happy, loving child. She is surprised to learn Hareton is her cousin since he is so rough
and uncouth.)

Synthesis: Chapters 16, 17, 18

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I cannot live without my life! I cannot live without my soul!" (Heathcliff desires torment for himself and
Catherine rather than being left alone in the world. How consistent is this with the desire of a lover for his
beloved?)

2. "I gave him my heart, and he took and pinched it to death, and flung it back to me." (How does
Isabella's description of how Heathcliff destroyed her love affect our assessment of his character and love
of Catherine? Note the contrast between Nelly's behavior towards Isabella and her behavior to Catherine
during her illnesses.)

3. "Well, Miss Cathy, if you were aware whose house this is, you'd be glad enough to get out." (Nelly's
hint leads to revelations about Cathy's connections to the Earnshaw family. Is this Nelly's intention?)

Chapters 19, 20, 21

"Courtship" of Cathy and Linton

1. What type of child is Linton? How much of his father, Heathcliff, is in his personality? How does his
physical condition affect his father's reaction to him? (He resembles the Lintons closely and is sickly and
frail – all characteristics which do not endear him to his father.)

2. How does Heathcliff plan to use Linton? (He wants to secure the Linton lands and property through the
marriage of Linton and Cathy; his triumph over his enemies will be complete.)

Synthesis: Chapters 19, 20, 21

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "Do you know that, twenty times a day, I covet Hareton, with all his degradation?" (Hareton reminds
Heathcliff of himself as a boy and how circumstances worked against him. But even though he pities him,
he keeps Hareton in ignorance and poverty.)
2. "I began to dislike, more than to compassionate, Linton, and to excuse his father, in some measure, for
holding him so cheap." (Nelly continues to make poor judgments. Why is it right or not right for her to
expect different behavior from a selfish, weak child who is being manipulated?)

Chapters 22-28

Edgar's death and Cathy's downfall

1. Why does Nelly allow Cathy to visit Linton? (In hopes that Linton will not be as sick as Heathcliff says.
Also, there may be some deeper motive depending on how complex the reader sees Nelly to be –
perhaps she desires to see Cathy romantically involved.)

2. How does Linton get Cathy to want to visit him again? (He appeals to her pity; her desire to comfort
him.)

3. Why is Cathy vulnerable to Linton's appeal for pity? (She thinks she can successfully nurse Linton back
to health; she wants to mother him – to turn him into a pet.)

4. Why does Edgar agree to allow Cathy and Linton to meet on the moors? (Edgar, not knowing about
Linton's true character and state of health, hopes that Linton will give Cathy some solace when Edgar is
gone; also Edgar hopes that Cathy will be able to stay in Thrushcross Grange if she marries Linton, who
will inherit it when Edgar is dead.)

5. Why do Cathy and Nelly consent to go to Wuthering Heights? (Cathy gives in to Linton's pleas because
he is so upset.)

6. How does Heathcliff show his cruelty to Cathy? (He locks her up, slaps her, and prevents her from
going to her father on his deathbed.)

Synthesis: Chapters 22-28

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I can get over the wall," she said laughing. "The Grange is not a prison, Ellen, and you are not my
jailer...And I'm certain Linton would recover quickly if he had me to look after him...I'd make such a pet of
him, if he were mine." (This expresses Cathy's sense of independence and power. Nelly can't control her,
but she is intent on controlling Linton.)

2. "I thought it over aloud, in my master's presence; walking straight from her room to his, and relating the
whole story; with the exception of her conversations with her cousin, and any mention of Hareton." (If
Nelly had leveled with Edgar at this point about Cathy's growing involvement with Linton and Linton's
weak and peevish nature, then perhaps Edgar would not have allowed Cathy and Linton's involvement to
progress to its dismal outcome.)

3. "Have you never loved anybody in all you life, Uncle? Never? Ah! you must look once – I'm so
wretched – you can't help being sorry and pitying me." (This scene contrasts with the scene in the
Phantom of the Opera in which Christine Daae throws herself at the mercy of the monstrous Erik. He, by
contrast, has pity on Christine. Heathcliff cruelly rejects Cathy's plea. Heathcliff's obdurate inhumanity
even to the children makes him one of the most thoroughly villainous characters in literature.)

Chapters 29, 30, 31


Cathy at Wuthering Heights

1. When Heathcliff comes to get Cathy to take her back to the Heights, what does she tell him that leads
Nelly to say that Cathy seemed to have "entered the spirit of her future family?" (Cathy tells Heathcliff that
they will have revenge in knowing that Heathcliff has the greater misery and is as lonely and envious as
the devil.)

2. After Linton dies why does Cathy treat Joseph, Hareton, and Zillah so contemptuously? (She resents
them for not offering her any support while Linton was dying.)

3. Why does Hareton burn his books in the fire? (Cathy has mocked his stumbling attempts to read.)

Synthesis: Chapters 29, 30, 31

What is the meaning of this quote?

"She has no lover or liker among us – and she does not deserve one...She'll snap at the master himself,
and as good as dares him to thrash her; and the more hurt she gets, the more venomous she grows."
(This view of the servant Zillah gives an image of how Cathy is responding to the alien atmosphere of
Wuthering Heights. The reader must decide to what extent this image is distorted by Zillah's point of
view.)

Epilogue: Chapters 32, 33, 34

Cathy and Hareton; the death of Heathcliff

1. How does Cathy show her sorrow for mocking Hareton's reading? (She tries to get him to read again
by leaving her books about.)

2. What role does Nelly play in the reconciliation of Cathy and Hareton? (Nelly is the go-between for the
two young people. She allows them to be together and encourages Hareton to be friends with Cathy, and
then she delivers a present to Hareton from Cathy.)

3. What is the physical reason for Heathcliff's death? (He did not eat or drink for four days.)

Synthesis: Chapters 32, 33, 34

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "Con-trary!" said a voice, as sweet as a silver bell, "that for the third time, you dunce! I'm not going to
tell you again. Recollect, or I pull your hair!" (Cathy teachers Hareton how to read and lovingly and
playfully criticizes him with mock severity. This scene suggests how the horror of the power and love
relationships of the older generation have been transformed into a romantic idyll.)

2. "The crown of all my wishes will be the union of those two. I shall envy no one on their wedding day –
there won't be a happier woman than myself in England!" (Nelly reveals that she fulfills her own longings
for romantic intimacy through the love of Cathy and Hareton.)

3. "I have lost the faculty of enjoying their destruction, and I am too idle to destroy for nothing." (Heathcliff
does not show any magnanimity in his not destroying the lives of Cathy and Hareton. Rather, his energy
for cruelty has faded as he has become more obsessed with the "ghost" of Catherine.)
WHILE READING THE NOVEL
Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights

Here are several activities for individuals and small groups that will focus and sharpen students' reading
and understanding of the novel.

1. *Focus on reading the more significant sections of the novel and replace the other sections with
chapter summaries such as those in the beginning of this guide. Alternatively, write the summaries and
share them with the rest of the class. (Note to the Teacher: The student summary writing can be done
cooperatively in pairs of a more able and a less able student.)

2. *Generate in class a running plot line of the material covered each day. Use the plot line to make
predictions about what will happen next in the novel as preparation for subsequent reading. Also use the
plot line as a basis for asking more analytical questions about character motivation and actions.

3. * Follow a systematic strategy in handling difficult vocabulary words in the novel, such as:

a. Try to figure out the meaning of the word

1) from the meaning of the sentence or paragraph,

2) from examining it for familiar parts.

If there is still too much uncertainty, then

b. Look up the word in a dictionary and choose the meaning most appropriate to the context.

If the word is one to worked on further, then

c. Record the word and its meaning in a vocabulary notebook.

Because there are so many potentially unfamiliar words in this novel, apply steps b and c only to those
words that are necessary to getting the basic story line.

4. *Use a reading strategy while reading Wuthering Heights aimed at reading efficiently and effectively:

a. Skim the chapter to get a feel for the main developments in the plot by reading the first
sentence of each paragraph.

b. Go back and read the chapter swiftly. If you encounter difficulty, just read on. The meaning will
gradually become clearer as you read.

c. Answer the questions given by the teacher or generated by the class by skimming to find the
relevant section in the text and reading that section carefully. Use a word attack strategy to
identify the meanings of all unfamiliar words in that section so that you have a thorough
understanding.

5. Construct a plot line for each of the stories in the novel: the story of Lockwood's brief tenancy at
Thrushcross Grange; and the history of the Earnshaw and Linton families. Consider the connection
between these two stories. How does one plot mirror the other? What is the action of the Lockwood plot?
Compare it to the action of the Heathcliff plot?

As you are reading, watch for the event that marks Heathcliff's loss of drive towards revenge. Speculate
about why this happens. Does it have anything to do with an identification between Hareton and himself
as a young man? Or is it connected to associations stirred by Lockwood's stay in Catherine's old room?
Another intriguing question is the relationship between Lockwood and Heathcliff. Why did Brontë choose
to begin the story with Lockwood? In what ways do the two characters mirror each other?

6. An important consideration in this novel is how much we trust the perceptions of the narrators,
Lockwood and Nelly Dean. Make a list of the actions of these characters. Compare your list with a partner
and analyze how the character's actions reveal motives and attitudes.

At crucial times in the story, Nelly actually knows more than the other characters or otherwise significantly
affects the action and outcome of events. While reading, list all the actions caused by Nelly. Begin to think
about the meaning of her involvement in the action. What doe it tell the reader about her? Do we trust her
story of the family histories?

Questions

The novel can best be read and discussed according to the significant divisions outlined in the synopsis:
the prologue, the history of the family, the epilogue. These questions and activities can be used for whole
class and small group discussions as well as adapted for journal or free writings.

Prologue – Chapters 1-3

1. What is Lockwood's first reaction to Heathcliff? What connections does Lockwood think exist between
them? What do Lockwood's comments about Heathcliff tells us about him? (Lockwood thinks that he and
Heathcliff are alike, both misanthropists. Lockwood is afraid of human involvements and attachments,
which is why he has chosen to live in such an isolated place as the Grange. In a perverse way he seeks
out Heathcliff's company because Heathcliff wants to have nothing to do with him.)

2. How does the opening set the tone for the novel? Note the use of words like solitary, misanthropist,
and desolation in the first paragraph. What mood does Brontë create with these words? (Sense of
mystery, isolation)

3. How is the description of Heathcliff significant? ("He is a dark-skinned gypsy in aspect, in dress and
manners a gentleman.") Note identifications between Heathcliff and animals in the opening scene. (Even
Heathcliff identifies with his dogs – "Guests are so exceedingly rare in this house that I and my dogs, I am
willing to own, hardly know how to receive them.")

4. After his second encounter with the inhabitants at Wuthering Heights, what conclusions does
Lockwood begin to draw about their characters? (Heathcliff is savage; Cathy is a witch; and the rough
Hareton is ready to fight at any imagined slight.)

5. Why is Heathcliff so moved by Lockwood's dreams? (This passage initiates one motif in the novel: The
importance of dreams as a pathway to associations and knowledge not available to the rational mind.
Students should watch for other references to dreams: Catherine's dream of being returned to her
childhood room; Nelly Dean's fear of dreams. There is a connection between "elemental" natures like
Catherine's and Heathcliff's and the subconscious world of dreams. How could Lockwood's account of his
dream be the catalyst that diverts Heathcliff from his revenge?)

Synthesis: Prologue – Chapters 1-3


Discuss the significance of each of the following quotes. In what ways do these quotes begin to shape our
understanding of the characters or the themes of the novel?

1. "Mr. Heathcliff forms a singular contrast to his abode and style of living. He is a dark-skinned gypsy in
aspect, in dress and manners a gentleman." (This description suggests the two side of Heathcliff's nature:
the sensuous, natural man over which has been superimposed the manners and niceties of the social and
civilized world.)

2. "Terror made me cruel; and, finding it useless to attempt shaking the creature off, I pulled its wrist on
the broken pane, and rubbed it to and fro till the blood ran down and soaked the bedclothes." (Lockwood's
nightmare reveals his fear of human relationships; instead of helping the poor, wandering child, he
desperately wants to free himself from its grasp. Lockwood doesn't want the demands that come with
relationships.)

3. "Come in! Come in!...Cathy, do come. Oh do – once more! Oh! my heart's darling! Hear me this time,
Catherine, at last!" (Lockwood overhears Heathcliff's anguished plea to Catherine to reveal herself. What
is Heathcliff feeling at this moment? How does this speech compare with the portrayal of Heathcliff so far
as a misanthropist, a man who doesn't have any feelings?)

History of the Family

This section covers chapters 4 through 31 in the novel. Because these chapters fall fairly consistently into
units of three chapters each, we have subdivided the reading and discussion questions accordingly. The
reading can be assigned in small or large units, and the questions adapted for class discussion or journal
writing.

Chapters 4, 5, 6

Early history of the Earnshaw family

1. What are Heathcliff's origins? How does Heathcliff fit into the family? (Heathcliff is abandoned on the
streets of Liverpool; although he is older than Catherine at the time Earnshaw brings him to live with the
family, he never refers to his childhood. The deprivation and alienation of this period mark his character
and explain why he is unable to form loving relationships. Heathcliff becomes Earnshaw's favorite,
Cathy's close friend and soul mate, and Hindley's rival.)

2. How is Catherine described by Nelly? Is there any suggestion that Nelly is exaggerating or
emphasizing certain traits over others? (Nelly describes herself as a "faithful servant," who is partial to the
master. When she judges Catherine as unruly, it's because she makes too much trouble for Mr.
Earnshaw. Also Nelly feels somewhat equal to Catherine since she has been raised as a member of the
family and she doesn't like to be ordered around by Catherine. Resentment and jealousy characterize
Nelly's relationship to Catherine.)

3. How does Hindley treat Heathcliff when he returns as master of the home after his father's death? (He
makes Heathcliff take the role of a servant, deprives him of an education, and tries to limit his interactions
with Catherine.)

Synthesis: Chapters 4, 5, 6

How do these quotes help us to understand the characters?

1. "I found that they had christened him `Heathcliff;' it was the name of a son who died in childhood, and it
served him ever since, both for Christian and surname." (The name "Heathcliff' suggests nature: the
heath and the cliff, the moors and the rocks. It is also significant that Heathcliff does not have a proper
surname; his identity or legal connection to the family is not legitimized. He will always be an outsider.)

2. "He complained so seldom, indeed, of such stirs as these, that I really thought him not vindictive. I was
deceived completely, as you will hear." (Nelly continually fails to understand Heathcliff's true character
even though his actions repeatedly disappoint her expectations. Why?)

3. "Her spirits were always at high-water mark, her tongue always going – singing, laughing, and plaguing
everybody who would not do the same." (Nelly's description of Catherine indicates high spirits, but not
necessarily bad behavior. Nelly complains that Catherine is not more sensitive to the feelings of others,
but her behavior seems natural for a child. Think about Nelly's point of view. She would be about the
same age as Catherine but she had a lot more responsibilities. Why might Nelly resent Catherine's
freedom and place in the family? Compare this to Nelly's description of Heathcliff: "He seemed a sullen,
patient child, hardened, perhaps to ill-treatment.")

4. "It is but a boy – but he scowls so plainly in his face; would it not be a kindness to the country to hang
him at once, before he shows his nature in acts as well as features?" (This quote shows the emphasis
upon outward appearance revealing the inner nature of a person. Heathcliff's features show he will be a
villain. The teacher might ask students to talk about the self-fulfilling prophecy and how character
judgments work upon a person to create behavior.)

Chapters 7, 8, 9

The triangle of Catherine, Heathcliff and Edgar Linton

1. How is Catherine changed by her stay at the Lintons? (She acquires the manners of a lady and enjoys
nice clothing and the society life of the Lintons.)

2. What are Heathcliff's reactions to these changes in Catherine? (He envies Linton his blond good looks,
his social standing and inheritance; he vows he will have revenge on Hindley for depriving him of his
status and equality to Catherine.)

3. How does Hindley react to his wife's death? What connections can you see between his and
Catherine's and Heathcliff's behaviors? (Hindley's excessive sorrow matches the extreme behavior of all
the Earnshaws. Compare his actions to Linton's reaction to Catherine's death.)

4. How does Catherine feel about Heathcliff? (The students should closely examine Catherine's speeches
on pp. 82-84.)

Synthesis: Chapters 7, 8, 9

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I shall not stand to be laughed at, I shall not bear it?" (Heathcliff's pride begins to erect barriers
between him and Catherine. Note: this passage should be should be returned to later to compare how
Hareton reacts to the taunting of Cathy and Linton.)

2. "It struck me soon...there would be more sense in endeavoring to repair some of his wrongs than
shedding tears over them." (Here is another instance of Nelly's loyalty to Heathcliff. She is prepared to
overlook his ill nature because she sees him as the underdog. There is an identification in Nelly's mind
between herself and Heathcliff. Students might begin to consider how Brontë manipulates our feelings
towards Heathcliff. Why might we feel Heathcliff has been wronged? How does Brontë sustain our
sympathy for Heathcliff?)

3. "Catherine and he were constant companions still as his seasons of respite from labor, but he had
ceased to express his fondness for her in words, and recoiled with angry suspicion from her girlish
caresses, as if conscious there could be no gratification in lavishing such marks of affection on him."
(Heathcliff is constantly aware of the distance between their two stations in life and distrusts Catherine's
affection. What effect do you think this distrust will have on their relationship? To what extent should
Heathcliff distrust Catherine?)

4. "I've dreamt in my life dreams that have stayed with me ever after, and changed my ideas; they've
gone through and through me, like wine through water, and altered the colour of my mind." (This is the
dream that Nelly refuses to hear. What could it be? What clues are there in Catherine's speech?)

5. "Nelly, I am Heathcliff! He's always, always in my mind – not as a pleasure, any more than I am always
a pleasure to myself, but as my own being." (Catherine sees herself and Heathcliff as one. Does she love
Heathcliff or her self in him?)

Chapters 10, 11, 12

Catherine and Edgar Linton's Married Life

1. In what ways is Heathcliff changed when he returns to Wuthering Heights? Why does he return? (Great
physical changes are evident, but it soon becomes clear that he is not reconciled to losing Catherine. He
begins to plan to revenge himself on the whole Earnshaw and Linton clan.)

2. What is Catherine's reaction to Isabella's infatuation with Heathcliff? (Jealousy, irritation; Catherine
does not want to share Heathcliff with anyone. She embarrasses Isabella in front of Heathcliff.)

3. How does Nelly interfere in Catherine's affairs and how does she react to Catherine's hysteria and
prediction that she will become dangerously ill? How culpable is Nelly for not informing Edgar about
Catherine's illness? (Nelly actually precipitates the violent confrontation between Edgar and Heathcliff
when she reports to Edgar the quarrel between Heathcliff and Catherine about Isabella.)

4. When Catherine becomes dangerously ill, to what time in her life does her mind return? Why?
(Girlhood: a time of unrestrained emotions, a time when she was not caught in a conflict between the two
sides of herself which are represented by Edgar and Heathcliff.)

Synthesis: Chapters 10, 11, 12

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I've fought through a bitter life since I last heard your voice, and you must forgive me, for I struggled
only for you!" (Heathcliff has done everything to make himself worthy of Catherine.)

2. "Tell her what Heathcliff is – an unreclaimed creature, without refinement, without cultivation; an arid
wilderness of furze and whinstone." (Can we trust Catherine's description of Heathcliff to Isabella? What
are her motives? If this is a true description, why is she attracted to him? If they are "one" as she said
earlier, what does this say about her?)
3. "You are welcome to torture me to death for your amusement, only allow me to amuse myself a little in
the same style, and refrain from insult as much as you are able." (Heathcliff resents Catherine's' marriage
to Linton and the way she tries to control him. He recognizes her manipulation and would like to pay her
back for some of his suffering.)

Chapters 13, 14, 15

Catherine's Illness

1. Why does Heathcliff elope with Isabella? What does she discover about his nature? (Heathcliff sees
Isabella as a tool to work out his plan of revenge against Linton. He feels total aversion for Isabella who
reminds him of his rival.)

2. What happens when Catherine and Heathcliff meet again? (They both blame each other for the failure
of their relationship. Catherine accuses Heathcliff of killing her and Heathcliff asks "Why did you betray
your own heart, Cathy?")

Synthesis: Chapters 13, 14, 15

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I have no pity! I have no pity! The more the worms writhe, the more I yearn to crush their entrails! It's a
moral teething; and I grind with greater energy, in proportion to the increase of pain." (Heathcliff has lost
all human feeling; he enjoys the suffering of his victims. Juxtapose this speech with his declarations of
"deep" love for Catherine. Can he love only one person and despise everyone else? Can Catherine and
Heathcliff create a universe of love which excludes everyone else?)

2. "I thought I prevented another explosion by my compliance; and I thought, too, it might create a
favourable crisis in Catherine's mental illness." (Nelly justifies her compliance with Heathcliff. How
culpable is she in this decision?)

3. "Because misery, and degradation, and death, and nothing that God or Satan could inflict would have
parted us, you, of you own will, did it." (Heathcliff blames Catherine for their broken hearts; his life will be
a living death without her.)

Chapters 16, 17, 18

Aftermath to Catherine's Death

1. What is Nelly's first thought after the death of Catherine and the birth of a baby girl? What does this
continue to show about her feelings for Catherine? (She expresses no sorrow. Check her reactions when
Catherine falls into a faint on p. 159. She is concerned about the master being left without an heir. It is
cold-hearted but consistent with her attitude towards Catherine for Nelly to be worrying over legal
considerations at this moment.)

2. What is Heathcliff's reactions to Catherine's death? (Anger and desolation.)

3. What is Isabella's response to Heathcliff's misery over the death of Catherine? How much satisfaction
does she enjoy? (She taunts and torments Heathcliff that his love killed Catherine, but she is not satisfied
with Heathcliff's suffering since she has not had a direct hand in causing it.)

4. What type of person is the child Cathy? How is she like or unlike her mother? What is her reactions
when she first meets Hareton and learns he is her cousin? (Nelly describes Cathy's childhood. Cathy
seems to be a happy, loving child. She is surprised to learn Hareton is her cousin since he is so rough
and uncouth.)

Synthesis: Chapters 16, 17, 18

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I cannot live without my life! I cannot live without my soul!" (Heathcliff desires torment for himself and
Catherine rather than being left alone in the world. How consistent is this with the desire of a lover for his
beloved?)

2. "I gave him my heart, and he took and pinched it to death, and flung it back to me." (How does
Isabella's description of how Heathcliff destroyed her love affect our assessment of his character and love
of Catherine? Note the contrast between Nelly's behavior towards Isabella and her behavior to Catherine
during her illnesses.)

3. "Well, Miss Cathy, if you were aware whose house this is, you'd be glad enough to get out." (Nelly's
hint leads to revelations about Cathy's connections to the Earnshaw family. Is this Nelly's intention?)

Chapters 19, 20, 21

"Courtship" of Cathy and Linton

1. What type of child is Linton? How much of his father, Heathcliff, is in his personality? How does his
physical condition affect his father's reaction to him? (He resembles the Lintons closely and is sickly and
frail – all characteristics which do not endear him to his father.)

2. How does Heathcliff plan to use Linton? (He wants to secure the Linton lands and property through the
marriage of Linton and Cathy; his triumph over his enemies will be complete.)

Synthesis: Chapters 19, 20, 21

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "Do you know that, twenty times a day, I covet Hareton, with all his degradation?" (Hareton reminds
Heathcliff of himself as a boy and how circumstances worked against him. But even though he pities him,
he keeps Hareton in ignorance and poverty.)

2. "I began to dislike, more than to compassionate, Linton, and to excuse his father, in some measure, for
holding him so cheap." (Nelly continues to make poor judgments. Why is it right or not right for her to
expect different behavior from a selfish, weak child who is being manipulated?)

Chapters 22-28

Edgar's death and Cathy's downfall

1. Why does Nelly allow Cathy to visit Linton? (In hopes that Linton will not be as sick as Heathcliff says.
Also, there may be some deeper motive depending on how complex the reader sees Nelly to be –
perhaps she desires to see Cathy romantically involved.)
2. How does Linton get Cathy to want to visit him again? (He appeals to her pity; her desire to comfort
him.)

3. Why is Cathy vulnerable to Linton's appeal for pity? (She thinks she can successfully nurse Linton back
to health; she wants to mother him – to turn him into a pet.)

4. Why does Edgar agree to allow Cathy and Linton to meet on the moors? (Edgar, not knowing about
Linton's true character and state of health, hopes that Linton will give Cathy some solace when Edgar is
gone; also Edgar hopes that Cathy will be able to stay in Thrushcross Grange if she marries Linton, who
will inherit it when Edgar is dead.)

5. Why do Cathy and Nelly consent to go to Wuthering Heights? (Cathy gives in to Linton's pleas because
he is so upset.)

6. How does Heathcliff show his cruelty to Cathy? (He locks her up, slaps her, and prevents her from
going to her father on his deathbed.)

Synthesis: Chapters 22-28

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "I can get over the wall," she said laughing. "The Grange is not a prison, Ellen, and you are not my
jailer...And I'm certain Linton would recover quickly if he had me to look after him...I'd make such a pet of
him, if he were mine." (This expresses Cathy's sense of independence and power. Nelly can't control her,
but she is intent on controlling Linton.)

2. "I thought it over aloud, in my master's presence; walking straight from her room to his, and relating the
whole story; with the exception of her conversations with her cousin, and any mention of Hareton." (If
Nelly had leveled with Edgar at this point about Cathy's growing involvement with Linton and Linton's
weak and peevish nature, then perhaps Edgar would not have allowed Cathy and Linton's involvement to
progress to its dismal outcome.)

3. "Have you never loved anybody in all you life, Uncle? Never? Ah! you must look once – I'm so
wretched – you can't help being sorry and pitying me." (This scene contrasts with the scene in the
Phantom of the Opera in which Christine Daae throws herself at the mercy of the monstrous Erik. He, by
contrast, has pity on Christine. Heathcliff cruelly rejects Cathy's plea. Heathcliff's obdurate inhumanity
even to the children makes him one of the most thoroughly villainous characters in literature.)

Chapters 29, 30, 31

Cathy at Wuthering Heights

1. When Heathcliff comes to get Cathy to take her back to the Heights, what does she tell him that leads
Nelly to say that Cathy seemed to have "entered the spirit of her future family?" (Cathy tells Heathcliff that
they will have revenge in knowing that Heathcliff has the greater misery and is as lonely and envious as
the devil.)

2. After Linton dies why does Cathy treat Joseph, Hareton, and Zillah so contemptuously? (She resents
them for not offering her any support while Linton was dying.)

3. Why does Hareton burn his books in the fire? (Cathy has mocked his stumbling attempts to read.)

Synthesis: Chapters 29, 30, 31


What is the meaning of this quote?

"She has no lover or liker among us – and she does not deserve one...She'll snap at the master himself,
and as good as dares him to thrash her; and the more hurt she gets, the more venomous she grows."
(This view of the servant Zillah gives an image of how Cathy is responding to the alien atmosphere of
Wuthering Heights. The reader must decide to what extent this image is distorted by Zillah's point of
view.)

Epilogue: Chapters 32, 33, 34

Cathy and Hareton; the death of Heathcliff

1. How does Cathy show her sorrow for mocking Hareton's reading? (She tries to get him to read again
by leaving her books about.)

2. What role does Nelly play in the reconciliation of Cathy and Hareton? (Nelly is the go-between for the
two young people. She allows them to be together and encourages Hareton to be friends with Cathy, and
then she delivers a present to Hareton from Cathy.)

3. What is the physical reason for Heathcliff's death? (He did not eat or drink for four days.)

Synthesis: Chapters 32, 33, 34

Explain the significance of these quotes.

1. "Con-trary!" said a voice, as sweet as a silver bell, "that for the third time, you dunce! I'm not going to
tell you again. Recollect, or I pull your hair!" (Cathy teachers Hareton how to read and lovingly and
playfully criticizes him with mock severity. This scene suggests how the horror of the power and love
relationships of the older generation have been transformed into a romantic idyll.)

2. "The crown of all my wishes will be the union of those two. I shall envy no one on their wedding day –
there won't be a happier woman than myself in England!" (Nelly reveals that she fulfills her own longings
for romantic intimacy through the love of Cathy and Hareton.)

3. "I have lost the faculty of enjoying their destruction, and I am too idle to destroy for nothing." (Heathcliff
does not show any magnanimity in his not destroying the lives of Cathy and Hareton. Rather, his energy
for cruelty has faded as he has become more obsessed with the "ghost" of Catherine.)

Wuthering Heights
by Emily Brontë

Page 4 of 5

AFTER READING THE NOVEL


Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights
These activities are designed to analyze the information and ideas which students have gathered before
and while reading the novel. They can be initiated at any time and modified to promote discussion and
analysis.

1. Each small group will be assigned one of the main characters in the novel. Together list the main traits
of this character. Choose a passage from the novel which best exemplifies the character. Read this
passage and summarize your ideas about the character for the class. Then role play characters
interacting with one another in several different scenarios:

a. Continue the conversation between Heathcliff and Catherine (after Nelly has left the room) on
the afternoon of their quarrel.

b. Create the conversation between Isabella and Heathcliff in the garden on the day they eloped.

c. Create the conversation between Isabella and Linton when he comes to her bedside near the
end of her life.

d. Create the interior conversation Heathcliff has with himself on the night he steals into the parlor
to hold the dead Catherine's body in his arms.

The possibilities of scenes and created conversations are limitless, depending on time and the number of
students you wish to participate in any one group.

2. Is Nelly Dean a good and loyal servant or is she manipulative and scheming? Pose this question to a
panel of judges. Appoint a committee for Nelly's defense. Appoint a prosecuting committee. Use a debate
format in which each group can make their presentation with a follow-up rebuttal. Each student in the
class will get to make a judgment on Nelly's character, listing the arguments that convinced them.

3. How would this story be different if told from another point of view? Rewrite a key section, using a
character other than Nelly Dean as the person telling the story.

4. Imagine Lockwood retelling the story of the Linton and Earnshaw families on his return to society. Write
thumbnail sketches of the characters Heathcliff, Nelly, Young Cathy, and Hareton as they appeared to
Lockwood. Note: In order to do this writing, you must have a clear idea of Lockwood's character and the
way in which he views others.

5. Imagine Lockwood has to find a tenant to take over the Grange to live out the rest of his rental contract.
How would he describe the location and the social life? Write a brief newspaper ad that would convince
people to relocate to the country. Discuss what Lockwood would definitely leave out of his description.

6. Write Heathcliff's obituary. How would his life be described? How would he be remembered?

7. As a group select what you consider the key scenes in the unfolding of the action of the novel. Then
work together to decide how to present theses scenes most effectively and dramatically. Each group will
present their "play" of the novel, using correct chronological sequencing of events.

8. Write a letter from one character to another character, expressing the person's feelings and
relationship to other characters.

9. Read one of Emily Brontë's poems about love, such as "Remembrance":

Cold in the earth – and the deep snow piled above thee
Far, far removed, cold in the dreary grave!
Have I forgot, my Only Love, to love thee,
Severed at last by Time's all-severing wave?

Cold in the earth, and fifteen wild Decembers


From those brown hills, have melted into spring –
Faithful indeed is the spirit and remembers
After such years of change and suffering!

No later light has lightened up my heaven,


No second morn has ever shone for me
All my life's bliss from thy dear life was given –
All my life's bliss is in the grave with thee.

(The Complete Poems of Emily Jane Brontë. Ed. C.W. Hatfield. New York: Columbia University
Press, 1941.)

Freely write about the connections between the poem and the love relationship of Catherine and
Heathcliff.

10. View a video of the novel. One popular version stars Timothy Dalton as Heathcliff and Anna Calder-
Marshall as Catherine. Watch for the significant changes between the novel and film. How does the
director control our sympathy for Catherine and Heathcliff? (Wuthering Heights. Screenplay by Patrick
Tilly. Produced by Samuel Z. Arkoff and James H. Nicholson. Directed by Robert Fuest. England:
American International Production, 1971.)

11. A technique called cybernetic strategy enables you to build on the analysis and responses to the
novel of your classmates. Your teacher writes one different thought-provoking question on each of five
sheets of poster-sized paper, and places the sheets, equally spaced, on the walls around the room with
five chairs clustered around each sheet. The class is divided into groups of five, with each group assigned
one sheet as their home base. Each group brainstorms and writes down their answers to each question.
After five-seven minutes the teacher directs the groups to move to the next sheet and to add to the
answers on that sheet. If there is time, the groups move around to all of the questions again, with
subsequent moves limited to three-five minutes. At the end of the moves, the groups return to their home
base to clarify and consolidate the answers. Then a member from each group reports to the whole class
the synthesized answer for that group's question. (Note: Here are some synthesizing questions; these
also can be done orally or as journal entries.

a. Compare and contrast the characters of Catherine and Young Cathy, Heathcliff and Hareton.

b. Identify (list) all the "love" relationships in the novel. What motivates each relationship or what
is a person attracted to in the other?

c. List all the crucial events that Nelly influences. What are Nelly's motives?

d. List the characteristics of Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange. How do the descriptions
reflect differences between the Earnshaws and the Lintons?)

12. The love relationship of Catherine and Heathcliff mirrors the love between Young Cathy and Hareton.
How do the younger characters resemble their older counterparts? List the traits of Catherine; then list the
traits of Cathy. How is the daughter like the mother? List the traits of Heathcliff and the traits of Hareton,
the boy Heathcliff judges to be more his offspring than his own son, Linton. How is Hareton like
Heathcliff? Then in the next stage consider how each of the younger generation is different from their
"parents."

13. Study the theme of love as power by examining Old Earnshaw's relationship with his children and
Heathcliff. What connections are established between love and control? How is the pattern of loving and
withholding love continued in subsequent generations?

14. Read a modern novel of love across classes. How is it similar; how does it differ? (See bibliography)

15. As a group, describe a fictional situation of vengeance that could take place in a modern high school
setting. Compare and contrast your story with Heathcliff's revenge. Discuss what motivates the avenger
and the ultimate effect of the vengeful act.

16, Make a chart of Catherine's behavior after Heathcliff's return. What judgment does it lead you to make
about her character? To what extent is she responsible for the events that follow?

17. Freely write about the feelings of Heathcliff after he leaves Wuthering Heights, convinced that he has
been rejected by Catherine, and his return three years later. How does he feel when he first sees
Catherine again? What does he say he has planned to do after seeing her? Why does he change his
mind? When does he initiate his plan for revenge? How does it begin to develop? How would their lives
have been different if Heathcliff had never returned?

18. How does Brontë maintain our sympathy for Catherine and Heathcliff even when their behavior
becomes increasingly selfish and destructive?

19. Five reviews of Wuthering Heights from January 1848 were found in Emily's writing desk after her
death. Here is a short excerpt from Douglas Jerrold's Weekly Newspaper, January 15, 1848: "In
Wuthering Heights the reader is shocked, disgusted, almost sickened by details of cruelty, inhumanity,
and the most diabolical hate and vengeance, and anon comes passages of powerful testimony to the
supreme power of love – even over demons in the human form. The women in the book are of a strange
fiendish-angelic nature, tantalizing, and terrible, and the men are indescribable out of the book itself."
What is the review's analysis of the novel? Do you agree/disagree with the reviewer's comment? Why or
why not? (The Brontës: The Critical Heritage. Ed. Miriam Allott. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul,
1974.)

Wuthering Heights: a novel beyond ordinary life

Since it was first published in the 1840's, Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights has received much
consideration in the media and from the academic world. While there has been much attention
given to the now considered classic, when it was published it was negatively reviewed and
considered to be a below average work of literature. One anonymous author reviewed the book
saying:

It is the province of an artist to modify and in some cases refine what he beholds in the ordinary
world. There never was a man whose daily life (that is to say, all his deeds and sayings, entire
and without exception) constituted fit materials for a book of fiction.
Though what the reviewer says, that the dullness of ordinary, life is too monotonous for a work
of fiction, Wuthering Heights surpasses the ordinary and embodies developed characters, a
simply based story line and a narration that includes many different voices, retold through one.

No matter what the medium - canvas, paper, clay, or an instrument - the artist working with it
must old the everyday and refine it to appease the audience. A painter or sculptor must take a
form and make it absolutely perfect, whether in beauty or grotesqueness in order to make the
audience take notice of it. If a work of art is too ordinary people pass over it and move onto the
next exhibit which does display a twist on their everyday life. With music, the musician uses his
or her instrument to recreate emotion and images from their world in their music, but filled with
splendour and grace. Without the contrasts of fortes and pianos, the fluidity of crescendo and
decrescendo and the ever changing tempo, a piece of music would again lose the attention of the
audience. Both artwork and music need to encompass a changing fluidity in order to captivate
their audiences and give them a twist on reality.

Literature works in much the same way in that it must attract the attention of the reader. Both
plot and characters must be identifiable to the reader but also encompass a sense of the
impossible. If a story is exactly what the reader does every day it becomes boring, yet at the
same time if there is no element of the plot that the reader finds feasible than they will become
discusted and lose interest. An author needs to exaggerate and exemplify life in order to retain an
audience.

When an author tries too hard to imitate life and fit a person's daily life into a book, a biography,
autobiography, newspaper or tabloid is created. But differences still remain from a book of
fiction: a biography or autobiography deals with summaries of important, exciting or interesting
points in the person's life; a newspaper deals with shocking, tragic or happy events briefly
summarised without much action; and a tabloid contains scandal and rumour, much of which is
questionable "non-fiction." In all of these forms, it is a summary, not all "deeds and sayings,
entire and without exception," that form them and spice them up for maximum audience
attention and retention.

Though criticised by her contemporary critics, Bronte succeeds in simple exaggeration of reality
in Wuthering Heights and dares the reader to compare his or her life to that of the Earnshaw's,
the Linton's or of Heathcliff's. The characters are identifiable and each contain elements of
reality. Even to the modern reader there are elements contained in all of the characters that are
readily recognized and each contains a part of the reader's true personality. When Cathy is young
she takes to exploring and as Nelly explains:

Catherine came to me, one morning, at eight o'clock, and said she was that day an Arabian
merchant, going to cross the Desert with his caravan; and I must give her plenty of provisions for
herself and beasts: a horse, and three camels, personated by a large hound and a couple of
pointers.

In this act all readers can remember being young and playing "make believe" whether it be a
fairy princess, a cowboy or an Arabian merchant. By placing everyday acts such as a child's
imaginary adventures in the story to lead to major and important plot events, the story flows
easily and places the story in a more relevant setting. If the characters were all unbelievable with
unconnected, coincidental events, then the story would fall short.

The character of Heathcliff at times tends to stretch the limits of many reader's reality, though
never does he fall into the Examiner reviewer's criticisms. Heathcliff is a character unlike any
other in the novel and leaves much to the readers imagination; never are his motives fully
understood, and never is it fully understood why he surrenders in the end of the novel. Through
the book it is never Bronte's intent to include all of his "deeds and sayings, entire and without
exception," and this is where the critique falls short. Heathcliff's main personality is shown, his
quirks and idiosyncrasies, and it is this way that an intriguing and compelling character is
created, not an unrefined ordinary character.

The story line of Wuthering Heights is a very simply based one that spans the lives of Catherine
and Heathcliff. Unlike as the review comments, the novel follows the main events and important
incidents of the story and thus avoids the mediocrity of the everyday. The story moves quickly,
giving detailed when needed, though giving brief descriptions when needed. Much of the early
history of the story is given in this brief manner as is any time that Nelly is not around. Near the
beginning of the story Nelly summarises Heathcliff's childhood saying, "Miss Cathy and he were
now very thick; but Hindley hated him: and to say the truth I did the same; and we plagued and
went on with him shamefully." Throughout the story it never stops over detailed analysis of a
single character's actions and continuously covers the events of both Thrushcross Grange and of
Wuthering Heights. As well, the plot has a clear start and end, even if it is not at the beginning of
the novel. The reader can tell that the story starts with the introduction of Heathcliff into the
Earnshaw family and ends with his death. From this the reader has a true sense of completion
while it frees the story form over generalising or over analysing.

The narration of a novel must be objective and leave out trivial information in order to captivate
the audience and to give the story a sense of reality. Through the eyes and ears of Nelly Dean,
the reader of Wuthering Heights experiences the characters and the settings. Even though
primarily told from one woman's point of view (some very small parts are narrated by Mr.
Lockwood) other characters have the opportunity to speak through Nelly and therefore the story
is broad based and complex. Because of the variety of voices coming through in the book Bronte
escapes the error of the trivial points of one persons life, as commented by the critic. If the story
was based on the everyday aspects of one characters life, there would not be the great cross
section of characters or the quick skips from one event to the next. And while on occasion the
story is biased by Nelly's opinion, Bronte counts on the reader's intelligence to deduce his or her
own opinion.

While the story of Wuthering Heights is a fairly narrowly confined one, it is not legitimate to
declare that it is the simple summary of one character's petty, dull life. Perhaps it is the time
difference between the mid-nineteenth century and the end of the twentieth, but the description
of a person's life is sometimes intruding to the reader, especially if it includes either something
that they could only imagine themselves doing but could never actually do, or if it verbalises
their thoughts. The modern author Douglas Coupland has perfected this and in his book Life
After God describes a boy prostitute Donny:
But Donny actively invited stabbing into his life. He said that stabbing didn't hurt nearly as much
as you'd think and that it was actually kind of cool, and that when it happened, "man, when the
blade first digs into you it makes your soul leap out of your body for just a second, like a salmon
jumping out of a river."

This passage describes the events of one man's life, "his deeds and sayings," and is yet intriguing
to the reader. Although Wuthering Heights is somewhat tamer in language and idea, it follows
the same principles as Life After God, that a familiar life with a twist is the easiest to relate to.

Though belittled when first published, Wuthering Heights has found its way into the ranks of
classic literature by recent scholars and critics. Filled with relatable characters, a believable story
in a realistic setting, it takes the ordinary and modifies it just enough to pass as authentic yet still
retaining the magic of fiction. Argued that the story is simply a boring account of menial life,
Wuthering Heights has captivated and enchanted generations of readers with a story that far
surpasses the average and portrays a tale of beauty.
I like it! 2 C!s
(idea) by snardvark Tue Apr 17 2001 at 22:15:50

Differences between 1939 film, and the 1847 novel:

While the most basic elements of the plot of the 1939 film version of Wuthering Heights are the
same as those in the novel, those familiar with Bronte's work will notice many differences
between the two.

As in the novel, Lockwood is a new comer to the world of Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross
Grange, and finds himself Heathcliff's unwelcome guest. However, when he spends the night, he
does not observe the books or bookshelves where Catherine's name is carved. After the
apparition of the ghost, rather than call to it from the window, as in the book, Heathcliff actually
goes outside. It is while he is engaged in seeking this ghost, and later mourning for lost love that
Ms. Dean tells Lockwood the story behind Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange. This
contrasts with the novel, where Lockwood learned of the story from Ms. Dean in his own home.

Once Nelly begins to recount the past to Lockwood, even more differences are immediately
noticeable. Nelly and Hindley are not the same age; they were in the book. Hindley is actually
much younger than he was in the book, and closer in age to Catherine. However, as in the book,
their father, Mr. Earnshaw returns from a trip with a souvenir no one had seen coming—an
orphan named Heathcliff. Catherine and Heathcliff quickly become very close friends, while
Hindley is forever jealous of him. One of the arguments from the book is in the movie, however
it is different. While in the novel, Heathcliff demands Hindley's horse because his has fallen
lame; in the movie Hindley demands Heathcliff's horse. In both cases, the outcome is violent.

The friendship between Heathcliff and Catherine is different as well. While the novel only refers
to the two running around together, in the movie they begin role-playing, and later in adulthood,
Catherine suggests that Heathcliff run away because he gets no respect at Wuthering Heights.
Hindley's adult life is different from that portrayed in the novel as well. The movie does not
feature his wife, and he never has a son, Hareton. The omissions of these two characters are
some of the greatest differences.

The ending, however, is the greatest shocker when the film version of Wuthering Heights is
compared to the novel. The film ends rather abruptly after the death of Catherine, whereas in the
book Cathy is born, and a romance between her and Linton later ensues.

For every similarity that can be drawn between the novel and the film Wuthering Heights, a
difference may be found as well. In some cases, these are more subtle—one character delivers a
line originally given to another, in others they are much greater, such as the omission of a
character.

Emily Bronte likes to trick you, so read carefully.

If, like me, you read Wuthering Heights as a hormonal adolescent, you will, like me, have seen it
as a gothic tale of love, tragedy and ghosts. I urge you to read it again, and consider the book in
light of the following.

Heathcliff exerts a mysterious power over his readers. Women often think him charming, quite a
hero; men think him scary. In defense of Heathcliff, many people point to his words to Nelly
Dean, regarding a desire to crush worms, and his reference to his own 'moral teething'. "See!"
they cry, triumphant, "he isn't really bad... it's a moral teething, and he inflicts cruelty without
meaning to!" On the other side of this is the claim that Heathcliff was needlessly and deliberately
cruel, as demonstrated by his strangling of Isabella's dog the night of their elopement.

Over all is the spectre of Cathy, haunting Heathcliff from the night of her burial, when he visits
her grave, to the night of her husband's burial, when her ghost is laid to rest. (In the Penguin
Classics edition this is Volume II, Chapter XV, p285). Of particular note is that when Heathcliff
visits her grave some eighteen years after her death, her face is still recognisable: she has not
decayed. "Ah" sighs the adolescent romantic, "the power of Love is such that she will wait for
him, unchanged, till he should join her." So thought I, until my mind was disabused by the
excellent lectures of Fred Langman of the Australian National University.

The first point of interest here is Heathcliff's moral teething. For a full discussion of this, dear
reader, I refer you to John Sutherland's "Who Betrays Elizabeth Bennet?" Meanwhile, it suffices
to say only that he is in his teething phase right through the second part of his life, after he
returns from his mysterious three year absence. He never leaves his teething in the past, indeed
he becomes worse, exacting revenge right to the last. So far we see Heathcliff as unrepentant. Or
is he? Right at the end of his career, Heathcliff declares that he is unable to continue, that his
plan of revenge leaves him unmoved. He doesn't repent, exactly, but at least he is not actively
cruel.

Next there is the charge of cruelty. It's interesting that the charges laid against him are always the
easily defensible ones. Nobody mentions poor Hindley, but they remember Isabella's dog. Do
you remember Isabella's dog? Do you recall Nelly untying it so that it could run away yapping
after the couple? That sounds to me (and to Fred) as though he tied up the dog to prevent it
following and making a noise. If my intended bride had a yappy dog I'd certainly silence it
before the elopement.

The biggest problem of all in Wuthering Heights is the ghost of Cathy. It appears first when
Heathcliff almost opens her coffin the night of her funeral, haunts him for eighteen years until
the death of her husband and on the night of his funeral, Heathcliff again disturbs her coffin. This
time, he pulls the lid right off to see her well-preserved face staring up at him and he is, at last, in
peace.

I have one very important thing to bring to your attention regarding this moving account of
Heathcliff's nocturnal visits: early in the book, when Lockwood is walking around the moors, he
sees the very church where Cathy is buried. He comments that it is a swampy, damp place, very
low, and that it is said that the swamp preserves the corpses buried there. "Aha!" exclaims the
rational adult reader. "I knew there was a reason!"

Now, I know you're just saying that to save face, but that's okay. You know now. Cathy's
miraculous unearthing is the product of nothing more than the circumstance of her coffin being
placed in a peat bog. From here, it is but a small step to the application of modern psychology to
explain how Heathcliff haunts himself until the death of Linton. Doesn't that make you feel
better?
'WUTHERING HEIGHTS' – PROBLEMS OF POSSESSION

'Towering over the romantic fiction of the mid-19th century are the Brontë sisters, in
particular Emily and Charlotte, who with Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre set a
standard, the first for the novel of doomed love, the second for the novel of the young
woman's climb to moral independence and a passion underscored by equality.' Oxford
Companion to English Literature

I find I have an irresolvable problem with 'Wuthering Heights'. The accepted view of the
novel, like that stated above, is that it is revolves around the passionate relationship
between the two main characters, Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff. Their love for
each other is meant to transcend all barriers, be they physical or spiritual. But the nature
of this love is destructive – it tears apart the fabric of the landscape around it. Even
Catherine herself admits:

'... "he's always in my mind – not as a pleasure, any more than I am always a pleasure to
myself."' p82

The nature of their love is controlling and selfish – not unconditional. The lovers make
disastrous decisions, often for their own gratification as opposed to each other's. The
actions are possessive and, therefore, I believe that this is a novel, not so much about
'doomed love', but about possession of people, property and ideas. Throughout the
novel all of the characters are, at some point, emotionally or physically dispossessed.
Heathcliff is introduced to the family, by old Earnshaw, as a childhood waif and stray –
miles away from the fiddle and whip that Hindley and Catherine hoped for. While his
appearance suggests that he comes from gypsy stock, Nellie later points out that he
could be heir to some far off kingdom. This is reflected in Earnshaw's observation,

'... "I was never so beaten with anything in my life; but you must e'en take it as a gift of
God; though it's as dark almost as if it came from the devil."' p36

He is continually made to feel like an outcast, as with the death of old Earnshaw and
Hindley's succession, when he is reduced to the rank of mere farm labourer. Again,
when he and Catherine visit Thrushcross Grange and she is taken in, injured, the closed
windows highlight their separation, not only from each other, but also in terms of social
spheres:

'... "The curtains were still looped up at one corner; and I resumed my station as a spy...'
p51

Ultimately he is isolated by Catherine's choice of Edgar for a husband. Hindley, in turn,


feels understandably dispossessed by the arrival of the stranger – on whom his father
showers affection. He, like many of the characters is emotionally isolated, save for the
short period of time he has with Frances. When Heathcliff grows up and challenges him,
Hindley is cast out of his role as master, and the order is upset once more. This in turn
dispossesses Hareton of his birthright. Meanwhile, Catherine, in the words of Terry
Eagleton, 'becomes after Earnshaw's death a spiritual orphan as Heathcliff is a literal
one.' She is dispossessed by association and allowed to run wild. While she attempts to
find a resolution in her marriage to Edgar, and the subsequent move to Thrushcross
Grange, her desire to have her cake and eat it – by continuing her relationship with
Heathcliff – results in her being stranded between the two. Is it naivety, self-deception or
arrogance at her own level of control that causes Catherine to make this cataclysmic
error of judgment? I believe that it is probably a bit of all of the above, illustrated by her
flimsy rationale that:

' ... "if I marry Linton, I can aid Heathcliff to rise, and place him out of my brother's
power."' p82

But this is a forlorn hope, as her decision fails to make either man happy. Finally,
Isabella, Cathy and Linton are all 'removed' from their natural surroundings. Isabella
marries into a 'sphere' alien to that which is natural to her, while Cathy is physically
isolated at the Grange, only to be further isolated by her marriage to Linton. It is only at
the novel's conclusion, with the union of Cathy and Hareton that emotional isolation and
physical dispossession comes to an end. However, the other side of the novel is the
possessive nature of the two main protagonists, and the need for many of the characters
to take possession of people or places. Heathcliff is the main culprit here. Desperate for
revenge, he becomes master of Wuthering Heights by steadily eroding Hindley's capital
at cards. This effectively gives him possession of Hindley – he is now his landlord and
master – as well as possession of his son Hareton, whom he brutalizes, in spite of the
boy's affection for him. He then goes onto secure Thrushcross Grange by forcibly
marrying Cathy to Linton. He has seized both of these children from Edgar – Cathy is
kept under house arrest. Also, the love expressed by Catherine and Heathcliff is often
controlling. While we feel sympathetic to Heathcliff, as Catherine's jilted lover, it is harder
to accept the boundless acts of selfishness he indulges in to win her back, punish her
and sometimes just to make himself feel better! He arrogantly rejects Edgar's love of
Catherine as callow and constantly attempts to undermine it:

'... "And that insipid, paltry creature attending her from duty and humanity! From pity and
charity!' p152

He even wishes to usurp Edgar in death, by being buried next to Catherine with the walls
of the coffins removed. By so strongly denying Catherine's relationship with Edgar,
Heathcliff is effectively rejecting her decision and even her autonomy. While one may
feel that Edgar does not fully understand or know Catherine, he is at least a dutiful and
loving husband. In fact, the greatest criticism that could be levelled against him is
weakness – he allows himself to fulfil the role of Heathcliff's victim, and this is especially
true when he makes no attempt to stop the man seizing first Linton and then Cathy.
Catherine, in turn, uses identity to control. Does her abstract declaration, 'I am
Heathcliff!' merely express a boundless love in which identity becomes irrelevant, or is it
also a useful means for her to continue possessing a part of him, in spite of her
forthcoming marriage to Edgar? This, surely, is the central crux of the novel. But either
way, the statement binds Heathcliff and her together, at a time when she has promised
herself to someone else. This in turn leads onto the subject of male ownership of
women, for the very identity of the novel's two women 'leads' is dependent upon the man
with whom they are aligned at the time. Brontë does this through surnames – which
feminists would also regard as a symbol of male ownership. Catherine starts out as
'Earnshaw', when she is under her father's jurisdiction; with his death comes her bond to
Heathcliff; then finally her agreement to marry, and thus become a 'Linton'. The cyclical
nature of the novel, with the conciliatory second half, means that her daughter
experiences the reverse: she begins as Catherine Linton, then Heathcliff, before finally
becoming an Earnshaw. This merely serves to highlight the possessive nature of the
relationships within the novel. The narrative, meanwhile, provides the reader with the
important task of deciding what to accept or reject as true. Lockwood and Nellie are both
relatively uninvolved in the general thrust of the story – but, to differing degrees, make
up for their limited roles by taking possession of the story itself. Lockwood 'frames' the
narrative for us, and yet bizarrely the story appears to have little effect upon him. While
he clearly enjoys a good yarn, and probes so much that one might go so far as to
suggest that he's really a bit of a gossip, he fails to appreciate the drama and passion.
He only claims to be interested in the characters 'more or less' and his talk of the 'hero'
and 'heroine' suggests that the whole event his remote or inaccessible to him. His entire
understanding is superficial, even crass. He talks as if the only function of this lengthy
and often terrible history is to 'amuse' him, and judges it, foremost, on such a basis:

'She (Nelly) is, on the whole, a very fair narrator and I don't think I could improve her
style.' p157

However, while he fails to appreciate the passion that exists between the main
characters, he does enjoy romanticizing events for himself. His attachment to the area,
and particularly Catherine Heathcliff, is clearly much greater than he would allow the
reader to believe. At one moment he states that:

'... my residence in that locality had already grown dim and dreamy.' p305

But upon hearing of Catherine's engagement to Hareton he admits,

'I bit my lip, in spite, at having thrown away the chance I might have had, of doing
something besides staring at its smiting beauty.' p308

The reader suspects that Lockwood would have done nothing but stare – his role as
bystander in the novel appears to be a metaphor for his entire life. But he does appear to
be an incorrigible romantic, possibly exaggerating descriptions, such as that of the
Heights when he returns one last time at the novel's end, in an attempt to enhance his
own desire for a happy, romantic conclusion. As a result the reader remains wary of him
– his only real involvement with the plot is his recounting of it. Similarly, Nellie Dean,
whilst perhaps the 'specimen of true benevolence and homely fidelity' of Charlotte
Brontë's 1850 Preface, is also well observed as the 'hidden enemy'. Indeed, the reader
would be mistaken to place a large amount of trust in her, for she only appears to live
through others, and the power vested in her by her possession of the narrative. There
are many examples of her hypocrisy and unreliability. For a start, she could be seen as
culpable in the novel's pivotal event – Catherine's consent to marry Edgar, for Catherine
seeks her advice but Nellie just piously lectures the 'wicked, unprincipled girl.' She is
also involved in Heathcliff and Catherine's secret meetings at the Grange, whilst at the
same time disapproving of them. (This she does again with regard to Cathy and Linton's
love letters.) She enjoys taking the moral high ground, whilst also revelling in getting her
hands dirty in the murky politics and dangerous liaisons. She works hard at getting
people's confidences, but has little problem breaking them. She is fickle in her
allegiances, one moment suggesting a romance between Lockwood and Catherine
Heathcliff; the next lauding her delight at the latter's union with Hareton. One might
suggest that she is the perfect narrator, for she appears to enjoy imparting things be
known only unto her. But the reader must question one who is clearly so expert in
knowing what to conceal or reveal:

'As soon as he recovered, I related our compulsory visit, and detention at the Heights: I
said Heathcliff forced me to go in, which was not quite true.' p282

Her life is clearly empty and her experiences limited. We can guess that her interest in
the relationships of others stems from the lack of one herself. We can, therefore, go onto
suggest that the only real sense of possession of person that she has is through her
telling of the story. In conclusion, it is my belief that the novel is not true to its organic
self. The imaginative centre, as we have established, is power and possession. This tells
throughout, in the actions of the characters, the isolation of their existences and even in
the means by which the story is told. On the other hand, I find much of Brontë's
description of a transcendent love inconsistent. Why, if their love can survive even
heaven and hell, does Heathcliff feel the need to degrade it by such a physical and
mortal act as opening Catherine's tomb? Why, if their spirits will live on at the Heights
and on the moors, as is implied at the end, does Heathcliff feel the need for the sides of
the coffins to be removed? The ending of the novel does not belong to it, either. The
power and attraction of the text lies in the destruction, not in the healing. The cyclical
means by which the reader goes full circle, and leaves the Heights as an open, scented
place where Catherine Earnshaw resides is not true to the novel's very core – it feels
false, formulaic. By comparison, 'Middlemarch' and the ending for Fred Vincy and Mary
Garth is entirely consistent with the novel's development – it is organic – while Cathy and
Hareton's union is not. One is about a wholesome, adult love, while the other is about a
destructive, adolescent passion. That is not to detract from Brontë's work, which is
powerful and poetic, but I believe that it's real power lies in the tale of destruction that
can be caused by I need to own and control. She is perhaps, as William Blake wrote of
John Milton, ' ... of the Devil's party without knowing it.' Bibliography Myths of Power: A
Marxist Study of the Brontës by Terry Eagleton, Macmillan 1975 Emily Brontë:
Wuthering Heights by Frank Goodridge, Edward Arnold 1979 The 19th Century Novel
and its Legacy Unit 5: Wuthering Heights prepared by Graham Holderness, The Open
University Press 1976 Penguin Critical Studies: Wuthering Heights by Rod Mengham,
Penguin Books 1988 Wuthering Heights: a Worksheet Guide by Jane O'Neill, Literary
Images Limited 1992 York Notes on Wuthering Heights by Angela Smith, Longman 1980
New Casebooks: Wuthering Heights edited by Patsy Stoneman, Macmillan 1993

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