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Heights
Study Guide by Course Hero
TENSE
What's Inside Wuthering Heights is told in past tense.
exile. When Heathcliff pursues his vendetta against the Lintons the time depicted in the novel and during Brontë's life are
and the Earnshaws by acquiring their estates, he deprives the accurately portrayed in Wuthering Heights. Upon marriage, the
families of properties they held for generations. control of any property or other financial assets belonged by
law to a woman's husband. Divorce was virtually unheard of,
and women were often placed in a position of dependency on
or otherwise disturbing events, eerie, elaborate settings (such villainous main characters whose ill-devised schemes and
as crumbling castles or dark, twisted forests), supernatural justifications make them more interesting than a
beings such as ghosts and demons, and disturbing imagery conventional hero
such as dripping daggers or broken mirrors. Characters in Villain: Acts as the antagonist of the main character;
gothic literature frequently transgress traditional social typically embodies evil or negative forces
boundaries or categories, such as the living and the dead Romantic hero: Possesses boundless energy and desire to
(Frankenstein), animal and human, or traditional male and force the world to bend to their individualism
female roles. Wuthering Heights with its violent characters and
events, and stormy moors, displays many of the qualities of the
genre.
a Author Biography
Romanticism, which was predominant in a wide variety of
artistic forms, emphasized the power of imagination and Emily Jane Brontë, born July 30, 1818, spent most of her life in
emotion over the rational and scientific and the freedom of the English countryside of Yorkshire. Little is known of her
individual self-expression, which might come in conflict with brief and isolated life. Brontë lived at the Haworth Parsonage,
society. Antihero protagonists, like Heathcliff, were common, where her father, Patrick Brontë, was a curate of the
functioning as a means for rebellion against the calm, harmony, Evangelical strand of the Church of England. Evangelical
and balance associated with classicism. The literary movement Christianity had begun as a movement against spiritual
lasted into the mid-19th century and led to the construction of superficiality believed to exist in the established Church. The
Gothic architecture in cities and a Gothic revival in general. The Methodist Church had separated from the Church of England
genius, sublime qualities of nature, and supernatural were before the Brontë children were born, and like their father, the
lauded in Romanticism. Wordsworth's "The spontaneous Brontës scorned Baptists and Methodists, who are mocked in
overflow of powerful feelings" was the motto. The spirit of Wuthering Heights.
Wuthering Heights with its powerful and evocative natural
The Yorkshire that Emily grew up in was an isolated, rural
imagery and fanciful and sometimes irrational leanings
place. Her mother died when Emily was just three years old.
embodies the genre.
Two of Emily's elder sisters also died during her childhood.
Characters and events in Wuthering Heights are typical of Four Brontë siblings remained: Emily, Charlotte, Anne, and
gothic and romantic literature, but the novel also falls in the Branwell, all within a year or two of each other in age. The
genre of realism. Its focus on the manipulation of property and Brontë family life was most likely warmhearted and the
marriage, the death of numerous characters from children's studies, religious exploration, and theatrical leanings
consumption, the prejudice against Heathcliff, and the struggle encouraged. Although a curate, Patrick Brontë was generally
of Cathy and Heathcliff against the strictures of class and against religious indoctrination of children and adults, and the
society are rooted in painful realities of the Victorian era. love of God was given more weight than the fear of hell.
According to Charlotte Brontë, Emily, like her father,
In Wuthering Heights Brontë manipulates conventional story wholeheartedly believed in a merciful Godhead and a blissful
elements and explores established ideas about heroes and life after death.
villains. By shifting characters' roles throughout the novel and
employing two narrators, she, at times, misleads readers and The children were schooled almost entirely at home and
thwarts their expectations. It is helpful to be familiar with a few became each other's closest companions and playmates. One
basic hero conventions when reading Wuthering Heights. of their pastimes was inventing elaborate, highly detailed
imaginary worlds, each with its own characters and storylines,
Conventional hero: Displays characteristics of goodness which they turned into tiny, handwritten books. The pastime did
and virtue, such as bravery, courage, honesty, and integrity not end with their childhoods, however: all four would become
Antihero: A protagonist lacking in heroic qualities; typically writers.
possesses both qualities of good and evil, and is often the
second most important character The Brontë family was not wealthy, and Emily, along with her
Gothic villain-hero/villain-hero/Satanic-hero: All evil-type siblings, had to find work. All of them attempted to become
teachers or tutors, but Emily, who was by nature introspective,
sensitive, and willful, particularly struggled with the grueling one of the primary works of Gothic fiction in English literature,
hours and harsh standard of behavior that was expected of with its combination of romance, horror, feverish passion, and
teachers, eventually giving up on it. Nonetheless, the Brontë death, and still has the power to shock readers. Heathcliff and
siblings all spurred each other to complete writing projects and Cathy are often cited among the greatest lovers in literature.
seek publication. It was Branwell, the only son, who was The novel's power has prompted numerous adaptations for
expected to achieve literary fame, but he published a handful film and television.
of poems and then sank into obscurity, becoming an alcoholic
and opium addict.
choose Edgar Linton over Heathcliff. She dies very young while from their cruel neighbor's attempts to exact revenge and take
giving birth to her only daughter, Catherine, and her memory ownership of Thrushcross Grange. Edgar fails to do so, and he
and ghost haunt Heathcliff for the rest of his life, as he seeks dies unable to prevent Heathcliff from carrying out his plan for
revenge for all the wrongs inflicted upon him in their childhood. revenge.
Catherine Hareton
Catherine is a kind, sweet, even-tempered child and young Hareton's mother dies at birth, and his father is eaten alive by
woman, unlike her mother, Cathy. She lives a sheltered grief. As a result, Hareton falls into Heathcliff's clutches and is
childhood with her father, Edgar, at Thrushcross Grange. unknowingly turned against his father and all the trappings of
However, when she meets her cousin Hareton, she despises upper class society. He lives a simple life, completely unaware
him for being an uneducated servant. She falls in love instead he is brutish and should have been raised as a gentleman.
with her sickly, bookish cousin, Linton, who betrays her when Meeting Catherine arouses a desire to be such a man, but her
his father, Heathcliff, threatens him. Linton and Catherine mockery of his attempts at self-improvement drive him further
marry, and Catherine is forced to care for him as Linton dies away from the norms of society and educational pursuits. He
soon after. With her inheritance stolen from her by Heathcliff, gives up and acts as if he despises Catherine. When fate, or
Catherine remains at Wuthering Heights until intense Heathcliff's revenge, forces him and Catherine to live at
loneliness causes her to seek her cousin Hareton's Wuthering Heights together, Hareton gives in when she asks to
companionship. While teaching him to read and write, the two reconcile with him. The girl he has always loved and admired
cousins fall in love. Upon Heathcliff's death, rightful ownership teaches him to read and write, and they fall in love. When
of Wuthering Heights and Thruschcross Grange are restored Heathcliff dies, Wuthering Heights is restored to Hareton, its
to Hareton and Catherine. rightful owner.
Edgar
Edgar is a snobbish boy who grows up to be a kind-spirited
gentleman as an adult and, later, master of Thrushcross
Grange. He marries Cathy and remains devoted to her.
However, due to a physical fight with Heathcliff after a fit of
jealousy, he aids in Cathy's demise. Fearful of Heathcliff after
Cathy's death, Edgar seeks to protect his daughter, Catherine,
Character Map
Servant
Heathcliff
Vengeful, obsessive antihero
Enemies Enemies
Spouses
Cathy
Father Angry spirit haunting
Heathcliff
Servant
Sweethearts
Catherine
Romantic heroine
Main Character
Minor Character
k Plot Summary closer. Cathy accepts Edgar's marriage proposal even though
she confesses her deep love for Heathcliff to Mrs. Dean.
Heathcliff overhears only part of their conversation and runs
In 1801 a gentleman from the city, Mr. Lockwood, rents
away in humiliation. Cathy is distraught over his disappearance.
Thrushcross Grange, an estate located deep in the wild
Three years later, right after Cathy marries Edgar Linton,
English countryside of Yorkshire. He sets out to meet his
Heathcliff returns. He has transformed into a wealthy,
landlord, Heathcliff, who lives at Wuthering Heights, an estate
attractive man with the manners and appearance of a
across the moors. Intrigued by the odd behavior of the
gentleman.
residents at Wuthering Heights, who appear to have no
respect for social customs, Mr. Lockwood returns the next day, Heathcliff has returned to wreak revenge for all the wrongs
arriving as it begins to snow. The weather forces Mr. done to him in childhood. Hindley's wife has died, leaving him to
Lockwood to spend the night there in a bedroom, which turns raise their child, Hareton. Hindley has cursed God and become
out to be haunted by a ghost named Cathy. Mr. Lockwood's an abusive alcoholic. Through gambling with Hindley, Heathcliff
screams bring Heathcliff into the room. Strangely, Heathcliff takes control of Wuthering Heights and manipulates Hareton
cries out for Cathy's ghost to come inside. to love him more than his own father.
The next morning Mr. Lockwood makes his way through the Heathcliff visits Cathy at Thrushcross Grange, and they
snow back to Thrushcross Grange. Struck with an illness become close friends again, confessing love for each other,
requiring him to stay in bed, Mr. Lockwood draws Mrs. Dean, a but also respecting Cathy's marriage to Edgar. All seems well
servant, into telling Heathcliff's life story. Having served at until Edgar's sister, Isabella, develops a one-sided crush on
Wuthering Heights since childhood, Mrs. Dean eagerly Heathcliff, who uses her to wreak revenge on Edgar for his
launches into the tale, beginning when Heathcliff is first childhood snobbery. Heathcliff marries Isabella and spitefully
brought home by Mr. Earnshaw from a trip to Liverpool. Mr. abuses and degrades her. Cathy is driven to madness when
Earnshaw has found the homeless orphan boy on the street Heathcliff is forbidden to visit her because of a fight between
there, taken him to Wuthering Heights, and named him him and Edgar. Pregnant with Edgar's child, Cathy fades into
Heathcliff after his son who died. In Mrs. Dean's narration, Mr. gloom and darkness. She and Heathcliff have one last
Earnshaw's wife and children, Cathy and Hindley, despise passionate meeting in which they berate each other for not
Heathcliff immediately for being a dark-haired "gipsy" with an staying together. Cathy dies later that night after giving birth to
ill-natured temperament. her daughter, Catherine.
Mr. Earnshaw's favoritism toward Heathcliff drives Hindley to Soon after Cathy's death, Isabella runs away and has
violence and hatred, but Cathy and Heathcliff become friends, Heathcliff's baby. She raises their son, Linton, alone, near
running wild on the moors and playing and studying together. London. Edgar raises Catherine alone at Thrushcross Grange.
Hindley is sent to college but returns with a wife when his Hindley dies, and Heathcliff raises Hareton alone at Wuthering
father dies. As new master of Wuthering Heights he uses his Heights. Continuing his vengeance even after Hindley's death,
power to turn Heathcliff into a servant, but Cathy shares her Heathcliff raises Hareton to be an uneducated servant instead
studies with Heathcliff, and they continue to play together on of an upper-class gentleman according to his station, forcing
the moors. on Hareton the degrading existence that Hindley forced on
Heathcliff as a young man.
One night Cathy and Heathcliff sneak over to Thrushcross
Grange to spy on the wealthy, blond and blue-eyed Linton As a child, Catherine meets Hareton one day when they are
both out on the moors, and their dogs fight. Catherine likes
Hareton until she finds out that he is a servant and her cousin.
When Catherine is almost thirteen, Isabella dies, and Linton
comes to live at Thrushcross Grange, but Heathcliff demands
to raise his own son and forces Linton to live at Wuthering
Heights. Linton is a sickly, pampered child. Heathcliff uses him
to gain control of Thrushcross Grange as Edgar is dying by
forcing Linton and Catherine to marry. Soon after their
marriage, Catherine nurses Linton as he dies.
Plot Diagram
Climax
11
10
12
9
Falling Action
Rising Action 8
13
7
6 14
5
15
4
Resolution
3
2
1
Introduction
Climax
6. Heathcliff and Edgar's fight causes Cathy's illness. 13. Catherine and Hareton become friends and fall in love.
7. Heathcliff marries Isabella. 14. How Heathcliff dies is revealed to Mr. Lockwood.
Resolution
Timeline of Events
1774
1777
1780
1783
March 1784
March 1800
August 1801
Winter 1801
September 1802
heavily, so he grabs a lantern to find his own way home. childhood with Heathcliff. She details her brother Hindley's
Joseph accuses him of stealing the lantern and commands the domineering mistreatment of them (he is especially hard on
dogs to attack. The dogs knock Mr. Lockwood over, and his Heathcliff, whom he exiles from family life) and the servant
yelling and screaming give him a nosebleed, at which Heathcliff Joseph's insistence on force-feeding them the Bible. She
laughs. Finally, Heathcliff allows Mr. Lockwood to spend the describes how Heathcliff is waiting to sneak out at night to the
night at Wuthering Heights. moors with her as soon as she finishes writing in her diary.
After reading the stories, Mr. Lockwood falls asleep and has
Analysis two terrible nightmares. In the first nightmare, Joseph
chastises Mr. Lockwood for not having a pilgrim's staff and
A typical Victorian gentleman, Mr. Lockwood expects to be hands him a weapon instead. They pass the Gimmerton chapel,
welcomed at Wuthering Heights with customary hospitality and which looks as it does in real life, run down and without a
good manners. He gradually realizes, however, that the clergyman; but in the dream, a famous preacher, Jabez
inhabitants of Wuthering Heights live by their own set of rules, Branderham, preaches to a full congregation. Inside the chapel
and his reliance on traditional social expectations fails and bored by the sermon, Mr. Lockwood, the dreamer,
miserably. True to his era, he expects a beautiful woman like "pinches" and "pricks" himself to stay awake when "a sudden
Catherine to be the "angel in the house," a sweet, domestic inspiration ... to denounce Jabez Branderham" seizes him.
goddess who is kind and welcoming, but Catherine is none of "Fellow-martyrs, have at him!" Mr. Lockwood cries out, but the
these things. congregation attacks Mr. Lockwood, not Jabez Branderham.
Having no weapon now, Mr. Lockwood wrestles Joseph for his
In Wuthering Heights, the social world Mr. Lockwood knows is weapon. The members of the congregation brawl with each
turned upside down. Mr. Lockwood's own social niceties begin other as the preacher taps loudly on the "boards of the pulpit,"
to give way as he finds himself in a hostile environment, and the sounds wake Mr. Lockwood up. He realizes that a fir
introducing the novel's theme of cyclical violence—in other tree branch scraping against the window has created all the
words, how violence creates violent people. Mr. Lockwood noise in his dream.
becomes increasingly angry in response to the "disagreeable"
companions who do not pretend social civility (as he does), In the second nightmare, Mr. Lockwood remembers the fir tree
check their violent tendencies, or care to be seen as helpful or banging against the window, so he breaks through the glass to
sociable. In this way, he is the embodiment of artificial, rational silence the annoying scraping sounds. However, instead of a
society. But Wuthering Heights infects Mr. Lockwood with its tree branch, Mr. Lockwood's "fingers closed on the fingers of a
own dark energy, reducing him to screeching like an angry little ice-cold hand." He hears a voice sobbing, "Let me in—Let
lunatic by the end of the chapter. me in," so he asks, "Who are you?" The ghost tells him she is
Catherine Linton. The ghost refuses to let go, and when she
finally does, Mr. Lockwood piles the books against the window
Chapter 3 and closes his eyes in terror. The books jump a bit on the
ledge, and that causes him to wake up screaming.
snow partway to Thrushcross Grange, leaving Mr. Lockwood will be rooted in the story of his childhood and relationship with
to find the rest of his way home by himself. After sinking in Cathy.
snowdrifts up to his neck and losing his way several times, he
arrives soaking wet and exhausted.
Chapter 4
Analysis
Mr. Lockwood's nightmare and Cathy's first appearance as a
Summary
ghost in the novel raise questions: Who is Cathy? How did she
Back at Thrushcross Grange, Mr. Lockwood finds out that Mrs.
die? Did she indeed have three last names, signifying two
Dean, a servant, has lived there for eighteen years and knows
marriages? She terrifies Lockwood who thinks she is demonic.
about Heathcliff and Cathy's past. He entices her to keep him
From her first appearance in the novel, Cathy's identity is
company and gossip about their neighbors at Wuthering
fragmented, foreshadowing how she will be associated with
Heights. Mr. Lockwood really wants to find out more about
shifting identities and allegiances as she is torn between her
Cathy.
family, her husband's family, and Heathcliff.
Mrs. Dean begins at the point in the past when Heathcliff, a
Cathy's appearance as a ghost adds another Gothic dimension
homeless orphan, is brought home by Mr. Earnshaw from a trip
to the story. She crosses the boundary between the living and
to Liverpool. Before he leaves for his trip, Mr. Earnshaw asks
the dead. Wuthering Heights is a haunted house both literally
his children, Cathy and Hindley, what gifts they would like him
and metaphorically. Characters throughout the novel are
to bring back from Liverpool. Cathy wants a whip, and Hindley
haunted psychologically by brutal childhoods, lost love, illness,
wants a fiddle. Remembering the young servant in training,
or other factors. Heathcliff's unusual response to Cathy's
Mrs. Dean—called Nelly or Ellen at that time—he promises to
ghostly visitation, for example, demonstrates how deeply she
bring her apples and pears.
haunts his existence years after her death. Cathy's ghost is a
child, suggesting how deeply events in the novel are rooted in a However, Mr. Earnshaw loses the whip, and the fiddle is
traumatic past. crushed on the long walk home with Heathcliff. Exhausted
when he arrives, Mr. Earnshaw says the trip nearly killed him.
Cathy's diary reveals a childhood full of repression, cruelty, and
He tells his family to take Heathcliff as "a gift of God ... though
rebellion that will haunt her and Heathcliff all their lives. These
it's as dark almost as if it came from the devil." Mrs. Earnshaw
incidents cause the children to become allies against their
calls Heathcliff "a gipsy brat," but agrees to take him in. Cathy
cruel mistreatment and against religion. The wild landscape
and Hindley, disappointed at losing their gifts, treat Heathcliff
mirrors the characters' emotions as the children seek an
badly, even spitting on him, but Cathy eventually befriends him,
escape on the moors, where they feel free to be themselves,
and he becomes Mr. Earnshaw's favorite.
unmediated by authority: "We cannot be damper, or colder, in
the rain than we are here." Ellen, the future Mrs. Dean, despises Heathcliff too, until
Hindley, Cathy, and Heathcliff get the measles. Ellen then steps
Mr. Lockwood's first nightmare of enduring a "four hundred
wholly into her position as a servant and cares for the sick
and ninety" part sermon reflects the way in which Cathy and
children. Heathcliff's sweetness during his illness changes her
Heathcliff shunned Joseph's type of religious instruction. It is
feelings toward him. Still, she wonders what Mr. Earnshaw
significant that Mr. Lockwood wrestles Joseph, as the Biblical
loves so much about Heathcliff to favor him over Hindley. Then
character Jacob wrestled with an angel, foreshadowing
she recalls when Mr. Earnshaw bought two horses, one for
religious struggles for many characters.
Hindley and one for Heathcliff. Heathcliff picks "the
Heathcliff succumbs to tears as he begs Cathy's ghost to stay, handsomest," but when it falls lame, he demands Hindley's
rousing pity and compassion in readers even after Mr. horse. Hindly refuses to trade, so Heathcliff picks a fight,
Lockwood has asserted Heathcliff's "genuine bad nature." The provoking Hindley to violence, so he can use his bruises as
explanation for how he came to be so "inhospitable" and angry proof to make Mr. Earnshaw beat Hindley. Hindley gives
Heathcliff the horse, saying, "I pray that he may break your
neck" and calls Heathcliff "imp of Satan." Ellen persuades also a homeless, penniless orphan, the lowest of the low on
Heathcliff to take the horse and not tell on Hindley. Since he Victorian England's social ladder.
takes her advice, she mistakenly believes him "not vindictive."
Chapter 5
Analysis
The structure of Wuthering Heights changes in Chapter 4,
leaving the present. Through its second narrator, Mrs. Dean, it
Summary
dives into the past. Mr. Lockwood's character fades away and
Mr. Earnshaw has taken ill and now sleeps by the fire in the
becomes peripheral to the story. The chapter also establishes
sitting area of Wuthering Heights. Dying has made him irritable,
Mrs. Dean's social status. She quickly corrects herself when
so everyone in the household tries not to bother him. Mr.
she says "us" while referring to the Lintons—a wealthy family
Earnshaw's anger is most stirred when anyone tries to "impose
whose storyline hasn't developed yet. The reader will come to
upon or domineer over" Heathcliff, his favorite. Ellen, Joseph,
learn Mrs. Dean is truly a part of the family, but her station in
and Cathy humor Mr. Earnshaw, and "that humouring was rich
life as a servant prevents her being acknowledged as such by
nourishment to the child's pride and black tempers." Hindley
the other main characters. While the novel largely focuses on
continues to scorn Heathcliff, which invokes his father's rage.
the upper classes, their story is related by a narrator who is a
servant, bringing into question Mrs. Dean's trustworthiness. As The curate suggests Hindley leave for college. Wuthering
the novel progresses, the reader will need to consider Mrs. Heights becomes more peaceful in his absence, but Joseph
Dean's role in the other characters' lives, whether she is an stirs new discord. Constantly "sermonizing," he is relentless in
unreliable narrator, and what her true intentions are at different "worrying [Mr. Earnshaw] about his soul's concerns." He
times as the story unfolds. encourages Mr. Earnshaw to disapprove of Hindley, Heathcliff,
and Cathy in order to gain more influence over the master of
The theme of good versus evil, symbolized by the fiddle and
the estate.
whip, develops in Earnshaw's first words about the young
Heathcliff. Which is Heathcliff, a gift or a curse? Which will Mrs. Dean describes Cathy during this time as putting "all of us
Heathcliff become, good or evil? Is he already evil when he past our patience fifty times and oftener in a day." Cathy is
arrives? Does he turn the Earnshaws toward evil, or do they always "singing, laughing, and plaguing everybody who would
turn him into the bitter, twisted man he eventually becomes? not do the same." At the same time, she praises Cathy's sweet
As this chapter reveals the roots of discord between the main smile and "bonn[y] eye." The stricter Mr. Earnshaw becomes as
characters, it explores the source of Heathcliff's evil—nature or he nears death, the more Cathy "delights in provoking him." Her
nuture? Cathy, already "mischievous" and "wayward," adopts favorite way to bother her father comes through showing him
Heathcliff as a playmate, but not before she and Hindley how Heathcliff does all of her bidding, while he only does Mr.
ridicule and shame him. Is she to blame for Heathcliff's evil Earnshaw's bidding "when it suited his own inclination." This
nature? Hindley, rejected by his own father, who previously leads to Cathy's father rejecting her and telling her, "I cannot
doted and spoiled him with gifts, turns violent against the love thee, thou'rt worse than thy brother."
"usurper." Is Heathcliff truly a usurper at this point? Is Hindley's
violence toward Heathcliff the cause of Heathcliff's later One warm, windy night, Mr. Earnshaw dies. Cathy, Mrs. Dean,
vindictiveness? Heathcliff, described by Mrs. Dean, is a and Heathcliff "wail ... loud and bitter" together. Mrs. Dean must
contradiction from the start: he is a "lamb" with the measles, fetch the doctor. When she returns, seeking solace for herself
yet there is evidence against him: an unknown background and as much as to console the others, she peeps through Cathy
a "sullen" disposition. From the start Heathcliff inspires strong, and Heathcliff's door, but they are calm and do not need her to
opposing reactions of love and hate. console them.
liking to sing and laugh? Like Heathcliff, Cathy's character is camaraderie and their vow to "grow up as rude as savages."
full of contradictions. Like Heathcliff, Cathy also suffers deep Out on the moor, they are free both from harsh authority and
rejection. Her father tells her he cannot love her, which from the differences in social status that otherwise would keep
hardens her, but she still kisses his hand and sings to him as he them separate. But by the end of the chapter, Heathcliff must
lies dying. Cathy's father's last words to her are: "Why canst watch from outside, looking through a window, as Cathy enjoys
thou not always be a good lass, Cathy?" In response, she the comforts inside the Linton home. This foreshadows many
laughs and asks why he cannot always be a good man. Cathy future situations in which Heathcliff will be forced to watch
struggles between acting as a "good lass" and being "bold, Cathy lead a life of privilege from which he is excluded. This
saucy" and having her own way. chapter also introduces Edgar and Isabella Linton, who will
play the foils—which is a literary term for when opposites
provide contrast—of Heathcliff and Cathy. Thrushcross Grange
One night, Hindley locks Cathy and Heathcliff out of the house
as punishment for staying out too long. Mrs. Dean waits up for
them, but Heathcliff returns alone. Earlier, Heathcliff and Cathy,
Chapter 7
raced across the moors to spy on their neighbors, the Lintons,
at Thrushcross Grange. As they look through a window,
curious to see how Edgar and Isabella, the Linton children, live
The Linton family has accepted an invitation for a Christmas wiser than her social status as a servant suggests; she
party at Wuthering Heights with the condition that Heathcliff dispenses sane, constructive advice to Heathcliff, and she is
not attend. The night before the party, Mrs. Dean reflects on kind to him in this chapter, but her advice has to compete with
Old Mr. Earnshaw's fondness for Heathcliff and how no one the terms of the cruel social world, which appears bent on
cares for him now. Feeling guilty, she offers to help dress and rejecting him no matter what he does. Heathcliff wants to clean
clean him, so he can impress Cathy. Heathcliff refuses Mrs. up his appearance to impress Cathy, but he believes, not
Dean's offer, and the next morning, leaves the house early to without cause, that the deck is not stacked in his favor. Again,
spend the day on the moors. Later in the day, though, he the novel displays the tension between the will to be good and
changes his mind, finds Mrs. Dean in the kitchen, and asks her the struggle to do so in a heartless world.
Mrs. Dean does not know at this time that Heathcliff is not distinctions—are useful and harmless, considering Heathcliff
allowed to join the Christmas party, so when the Lintons arrive has no way of knowing his origins anyway. Either way, the
she encourages Heathcliff, dressed up now, to emerge from advice Mrs. Dean gives Heathcliff in this chapter speaks
the kitchen into the sitting area. Hindley is just coming into the volumes about her character's inner workings.
After the party, Mrs. Dean brings Heathcliff into the kitchen, of pride and pain, Heathcliff has opted for an absolute path
since he has not eaten much for two days now. Heathcliff tells from which there appears to be no turning back.
reprove evil. Even the curate refrains from coming to the house
Chapter 8 Mrs. Dean now describes as "infernal," and in the center of the
action, Cathy is riled to violence, physically hitting multiple
characters. That hitting Edgar provokes him to confess his love
Summary is telling; it foreshadows later insights into Cathy and Edgar's
relationship.
Mrs. Frances Earnshaw, wracked by consumption, gives birth
to Hareton Earnshaw and dies shortly after in Hindley's arms. Mrs. Dean's character is also quite different in this chapter.
The loss causes Hindley to curse God, take up drink, and She is more angry and spiteful, telling the reader she's been
behave more cruelly than ever, causing all of the servants to vexing and mocking Cathy on purpose, and she's happy when
flee and everyone else to avoid visiting. Cathy lashes out at Edgar and shows him her true colors.
Mrs. Dean admits to not liking Cathy and trying to "bring down Cathy has her own problems, having "adopted a double
her arrogance," while Cathy and Heathcliff remain good character" as she is torn between Edgar and Heathcliff. As the
friends, but only in private, as Cathy finds herself torn between three last names that Mr. Lockwood sees etched into Cathy's
him and her new friend, Edgar Linton. One day, Cathy turns on window ledge suggest, she suffers from a fractured sense of
Heathcliff who appears unexpectedly just as Edgar is about to identity. She acts one way with the Lintons, where she behaves
arrive for a visit. Cathy continues to act out in frustration, in a ladylike fashion. She also fails to defend Heathcliff when
pinching then slapping Mrs. Dean, shaking baby Hareton, and the Lintons belittle him. She acts another way when she is at
hitting Edgar when he tries to intervene. Edgar threatens to Wuthering Heights, where she and Heathcliff are "unruly"
never return to Wuthering Heights, but Cathy convinces him to together as always, and she underplays her attachment to the
stay; they make up and confess their feelings of love for each Lintons.
other.
Chapter 9
Analysis
This chapter examines the connection between evil and Summary
violence and the cycles they create when characters suffer
pain and frustration, particularly the pain of separation, and Hindley, in a drunken state, threatens Mrs. Dean with a knife
their responses set off chain reactions in which violence and and dangles Hareton over the stairs, claiming he will break the
evil create more of the same. At the crucial moment when child's neck. The child struggles, and Hindley drops him.
something resembling peace is possible in the novel, the death Heathcliff, who has just walked in, instinctively catches
of Hindley's wife causes him to spiral back into his violent Hareton, but regrets missing an opportunity for revenge
behavior. Mrs. Dean paints a dark picture for the reader to against Hindley by doing so.
show that evil creates violence and violence creates more
violence, a core message in the novel. Notice Mrs. Dean's Later, Cathy asks Mrs. Dean's advice about love and then
verbiage throughout the chapter as the novel continues to confides her acceptance of Edgar Linton's marriage proposal.
explore the effects of a negative environment on the Mrs. Dean asks Cathy a series of questions about her feelings
characters. Hindley descends into evil because he "neither for Edgar: "First and foremost, do you love Mr. Edgar? Why do
wept nor prayed; he cursed and defied: execrated God and you love him? And now, say how you love him? There are
man," Mrs. Dean tells the reader, and thus, he becomes violent: several other handsome, rich young men in the world ... what
Hindley's treatment of Heathcliff "was enough to make a fiend should hinder you from loving them?" Mrs. Dean is unsatisfied
of a saint." His evil behavior is shown to be infectious. It with Cathy's reasons for marrying Edgar. When Cathy says she
spreads throughout Wuthering Heights—to all the wants to marry Edgar because "he is handsome and pleasant
characters—from Heathcliff seeming "possessed of something to be with," Mrs. Dean responds, "Bad!" And when Cathy says,
diabolical at that period" to Joseph being the only other "Because he is rich," Mrs. Dean replies, "Worst of all." Cathy
servant to stay because he has such rich opportunities to admits she has already accepted the proposal, so Mrs. Dean's
opinion does not really matter. Cathy just wants Mrs. Dean to her, to nurse her there. Mr. and Mrs. Linton catch Cathy's fever
say her choice is right. Mrs. Dean teases her and says, and die. Heathcliff does not return, and the story skips ahead
"perfectly right; if people be right to marry only for the three years to when Cathy marries Edgar in the Gimmerton
present." Chapel and demands Mrs. Dean leave baby Hareton and move
to Thrushcross Grange.
During their conversation, Cathy describes a dream she had, in
which she travels to heaven and feels as though she does not
belong there. Her longing to return to earth makes "the angels Analysis
so angry" they fling her "out into the heath on the top of
Wuthering Heights." Then they discuss Heathcliff, whom Nelly Hindley's position as antagonist to Heathcliff is further
knows is eavesdropping on their conversation; when Cathy developed in this chapter. Heathcliff heroically saves Hareton,
asks, Nelly lies, saying that he is in the stable. Cathy admits moving the reader to hope for his ultimate redemption as hero,
that although Heathcliff's dirtiness and low social status are but his regret at missing an opportunity for revenge continues
Hindley's fault, she feels that it would "degrade" her to marry his status as an antihero, which is a protagonist who lacks
him. Heathcliff overhears this, and Mrs. Dean sees him heroic qualities. This moment also establishes the bond that
sneaking out of the room. She tells Cathy to be quiet, that will develop between Heathcliff and Hareton.
Joseph has arrived with Heathcliff—just as Joseph's wagon is
heard on the road. Then Mrs. Dean admits Heathcliff may have The novel explores ideas of love through Mrs. Dean's Socratic
heard their conversation. Cathy is very upset, and confesses questioning of Cathy. The method of using questions to
she really belongs with Heathcliff, not Edgar Linton. She tries explore assumptions, beliefs, and truths by using logic comes
to explain how her choice of marrying Edgar Linton could from the Greek philosopher Socrates and is still used in
benefit Heathcliff. Then she passionately describes her education and philosophy today. Mrs. Dean uses logic to
feelings, saying she believes she is Heathcliff, their souls are conclude that Cathy's love for Edgar is false. Cathy adds to the
one, and "if all else perished and he remained, I should still conclusion by confessing her passionate feelings for
continue to be." She says her love for Edgar is like "foliage in Heathcliff. Mrs. Dean and Cathy's dialogue creates dramatic
the woods: time will change it," but her love for Heathcliff irony. The reader (and Mrs. Dean) know Cathy is in love with
"resembles the eternal rocks beneath." Heathcliff and her reasons for marrying Edgar are shaky at
best, but Cathy is earnestly tossing in her own confusion. In
Joseph, Cathy, and Mrs. Dean look for Heathcliff, but no one Wuthering Heights, there are many kinds of love, and each
can find him. Later, a violent thunderstorm topples a tree and character approaches love differently. The novel asks: What is
brings it crashing down onto the roof. During the storm, Joseph the quality of Cathy and Edgar's love? What of Cathy and
kneels and prays, "beseeching the Lord to remember the Heathcliff's? What does it mean? Is there a higher quality of
patriarchs Noah and Lot ... spare the righteous ... [and] smite love, and if so, what is it?
the ungodly." Fearing Hindley is dead, Joseph and Mrs. Dean
check on him, shaking the handle of his door. Hindley is drunk, Mrs. Dean's reliability is called into question in this chapter: we
but still alive, and he shouts at them from his room, causing do not know why she pretends that Heathcliff is not listening,
Joseph to reply, "a wide distinction might be drawn between but the fact that she lies about this suggests that she is willing
saints like [Joseph] and sinners like his [Hindley]." to be dishonest, and also perhaps that she is trying to
manipulate the situation.
Cathy wanders outside in the rain until after midnight,
searching for Heathcliff, but she does not find him. The next Again, Heathcliff and Cathy's differing class status is an issue,
morning, still wet and shivering, Cathy is wide-awake in the forcing them apart and making it impossible for them to marry.
sitting room. Mrs. Dean scolds her for not going to bed, and Cathy truly believes by marrying Edgar, she can remove
Hindley, arriving for breakfast, realizes Cathy is ill. Cathy's Heathcliff from harm by using her new fortune to help him
condition worsens until she is overcome with delirium. The leave Wuthering Heights. Unfortunately, Heathcliff does not
doctor is called for, and Mrs. Dean and Joseph care for Cathy stay to hear Cathy's true feelings and motivations. Mrs. Dean
through many weeks of a long illness. Old Mrs. Linton visits a presents the harsh social reality that once Cathy is married to
few times and then takes Cathy to Thrushcross Grange with Edgar she will have no power.
Joseph's sermonizing takes on a deeper layer of significance in worthy of a gentleman's regard." Cathy, so ecstatic to have
this chapter, which is heavily laden with biblical references to Heathcliff back, tells Mrs. Dean that she has reconciled with
Lot, Noah, Jonah, and scripture. Whereas he has been mocked "God and humanity! I had risen in angry rebellion against
in previous chapters, he is somewhat validated for his religious Providence." Determined to be good now, she will make up
judgment in this chapter in the way Hindley's blasphemy at God with Edgar and be an angel.
contrasts Joseph's moralizing. Most Victorian era readers
attended church, and they would have been familiar with the Time passes and it becomes normal for Heathcliff to visit
biblical references alluded to in the novel. For example, Mrs. Thrushcross Grange, but Mrs. Dean worries Heathcliff plans to
Dean compares Hindley to Jonah, a character who ran from his "work mischief under a cloak" and harm the family. He has
calling and duty by hiding in the belly of a fish. rented a space from Hindley at Wuthering Heights. Mrs. Dean
asks Cathy what she thinks about Heathcliff staying there.
Cathy says Hindley is greedy for the rent money, reckless
unfold, "Did he [Heathcliff] finish his education ... and come to marry her. The finishing touch comes at the end when Mrs.
back a gentleman?" just as readers may guess. As Mrs. Dean Dean wishes he would leave, feeling that "an evil beast prowled
jumps into the story, it does seem, at first, to be possible. Cathy between it and the fold, waiting his time to spring and destroy."
and Edgar "were really in possession of deep and growing
happiness." Heathcliff is transformed into a gentleman, and
Cathy reconciles with God because she is so happy to see Chapter 11
Heathcliff again. Mrs. Dean provides the dropping of the other
shoe, so to speak. She has a foreboding presentiment. She
notices Heathcliff's comment about planning revenge and
Summary
changing his mind, and she cautions in specific ways that
foreshadow events to come, including advising Cathy not to
One day, while walking out on the moors, Mrs. Dean sees the
praise one man to the other "unless you would like an open
ghost of Hindley as a child. Terrified, she also feels "an
quarrel between them." By admitting she favors Edgar, she
irresistible yearning to be at the Heights," so she follows the
reveals whose side she is on, which will be important for the
spirit. The "apparition" reaches Wuthering Heights before Mrs.
reader to know during events that take place in upcoming
Dean. Finally, as she stands looking through the gate, she
chapters. Also, readers may wonder: Why is Mrs. Dean
realizes, the ghost is a real child, Hareton, whom she has not
uncertain about Heathcliff's intentions for the remainder of the
seen for years. Hareton does not recognize Mrs. Dean, who
chapter after she hears Heathcliff's explicit plans for revenge?
nursed him as a baby. He hurls rocks at her and curses her,
Again, she proves herself to be an unreliable narrator, swayed
which makes her sad, not angry. Mrs. Dean finds out that
by her feelings about her subjects.
Heathcliff has taught Hareton to curse and protects him from
"Devil daddy," Hindley. She also learns that the curate is no
Edgar's pride (believing Heathcliff is beneath him) is
longer teaching Hareton to read and write. Then Heathcliff
threatened by Cathy's insistence they be friends and Edgar
appears in the doorway. Terrified, Mrs. Dean runs all the way
treat Heathcliff like a gentleman. Edgar's pride causes him to
back to Thrushcross Grange.
break down and cry, which results in Cathy's drawing closer to
Heathcliff and the views and loyalty they formed together in
Heathcliff shows up later at Thrushcross Grange, and Mrs.
their youth. With Isabella's crush comes an exploration of a
Dean, peering out of the window, happens to catch him
new type of love in the novel: unrequited love.
embracing Isabella Linton. Cathy overhears Mrs. Dean shouting
"Judas! Traitor!" and looks out of the window too. They watch
Cathy's character shows even more inner conflict. She acts
Isabella "tear herself free, and run into the garden." When
cruelly to Isabella about her crush on Heathcliff. Then says she
Heathcliff comes inside, Mrs. Dean yells at Heathcliff. Cathy
is trying to protect Isabella. Cathy presents Heathcliff as a
silences Mrs. Dean, saying, "To hear you, people might think
gentleman. Yet, later, she tells Isabella how cruel and "wolfish"
you were the mistress ... you want setting down in your right
Heathcliff really is. Which is the truth? Cathy ignores
place!"
Heathcliff's attempt to take Wuthering Heights from Hindley,
yet warns Heathcliff to not even dare to take Thrushcross
Cathy demands that Heathcliff leave Isabella alone, and they
Grange. The chapter raises questions: Is Cathy really trying to
fight over it. Heathcliff protesting, "I have a right to kiss her ... I
help Isabella? Does she love Edgar? If she knows what
am not your husband: you needn't be jealous of me." Cathy
Heathcliff is up to, why doesn't she try to stop him?
denies being jealous and says if Heathcliff likes Isabella he
should marry her, but Cathy is certain he does not like Isabella.
By the end of the chapter Brontë subverts the reader's
Then Heathcliff accuses Cathy of treating him "infernally" and
expectations for a happy ending and heroic Heathcliff. If the
threatens her: "If you fancy I'll suffer unrevenged, I'll convince
reader is unconvinced by Mrs. Dean worrying and still holding
you of the contrary."
hope that Heathcliff will find goodness, Cathy's words to
Isabella about Heathcliff's true nature seem designed for the
Mrs. Dean leaves Heathcliff "brooding on his evil thoughts" and
hopeful reader when she says, "don't imagine that he conceals
runs to Edgar, the master, to tell him exactly what she thinks
depths of benevolence and affection beneath a stern exterior!"
about Isabella, Cathy, and Heathcliff's low behavior. Edgar
Then Heathcliff himself says he would beat Isabella if he were
agrees, exclaiming "this is insufferable," and he says it is
"disgraceful that she should own him for a friend, and force his desires more.
company on me!" Edgar goes downstairs to kick Heathcliff out
of the house, which leads to a confrontation. Cathy takes Cathy chooses Heathcliff over Edgar during their fight, yet
Heathcliff's side and humiliates Edgar, telling him in front of Edgar tries to make her choose between them later in the
Heathcliff, "If you have not the courage to attack [Heathcliff], chapter. Was this internal choice inevitable? Cathy suggests
make an apology, or allow yourself to be beaten ... I wish that her and Edgar's love lacks passion. And passion is
Heathcliff may flog you sick, for daring to think an evil thought something Heathcliff and Cathy, being alike, need to survive. It
of me!" Cornered, because Cathy has locked the front door is clear to Edgar by the end of the chapter that a line has been
from within and thrown the key in the fire, Edgar has no choice drawn, and this is why he responds by forcing her to choose.
but to fight Heathcliff after he pushes Edgar's chair. Edgar Because Cathy knows she will lose Edgar if she verbalizes her
punches Heathcliff in the throat and walks out the back door choice, she manipulates the situation to escape the
while he chokes. Obviously, Heathcliff will not be able to visit consequences. At least it appears that way through Mrs.
Thrushcross Grange again. Cathy tells Heathcliff to leave Dean's eyes. However, Mrs. Dean has admitted to not liking
before Edgar comes back with men and pistols. "I'd rather see Cathy and favoring Edgar, and she tells on Cathy in this
Edgar at bay than you," she says. chapter, which makes a bad situation worse. This is another
example of how the lower-class servants have power over
Heathcliff leaves and Cathy throws a fit. "I shall get wild," she their upper-class masters.
tells Mrs. Dean, "say to Edgar ... that I'm in danger of being
seriously ill. I wish it may prove true ... I want to frighten him." Ideas of pride are explored throughout the chapter, beginning
But when Edgar returns, Mrs. Dean exposes the manipulation, with Cathy's chastisement of Mrs. Dean for not acting in her
believing, "a person who could plan the turning of fits of proper place. Heathcliff's pride is ruffled before the chapter
passion ... might, by exerting her will, manage to control begins (the fight brings out his anger), and Edgar's pride is
herself." instigated before the chapter ends. Cathy's pride causes her to
make herself sick rather than apologize, reflect, or speak the
Edgar tries to make Cathy choose between him and Heathcliff, truth. Mrs. Dean's pride adds to the strife, turning her impatient
but not wanting to choose, she tells him, "Your cold blood and cold-hearted toward Cathy. Pride leads all the characters
cannot be worked into a fever; your veins are full of ice-water; astray, whether master or servant.
but mine are boiling, and the sight of such chillness makes
them dance." For the next several days Edgar sulks in the
library, unaware that Cathy has locked herself in her room and Chapter 12
refuses to eat.
Summary
Analysis
Cathy and Edgar have still not spoken since their fight over
Doubling, the mirroring or reincarnating of one character in
Heathcliff. Edgar continues to sulk in the library while Cathy is
another, is a major part of Wuthering Heights. Mrs. Dean's
locked in her bedroom, refusing to eat. Mrs. Dean "went about
confusing Hareton for the ghost of Hindley is the first double in
[her] household duties, convinced that the Grange had but one
the novel. It is significant that Hareton is no longer being
sensible soul in its walls, and that lodged in [her] body." Finally,
educated because Hareton's character will repeat Heathcliff's
Cathy requests something to eat, exclaiming "Oh I will die,"
childhood.
then changing her mind, fearing Edgar will not care if she does.
The uproar between Cathy and Heathcliff suggests a Mrs. Dean, unable to "get rid of the notion that she acted a part
deterioration of love and friendship. The key to understanding of her disorder," underplays Edgar's concern, saying he's
why comes through Heathcliff's gripe: he is angry about the "tolerably well ... continually among his books" when Cathy
past, perhaps, but more important is his dissatisfaction with his asks about him. Cathy begs Mrs. Dean to convince Edgar she
current situation. His words are not the words of a man happy is in danger of starving herself. Mrs. Dean refuses and reminds
to visit Cathy from time to time, and his actions suggest he Cathy that she ate tea and toast earlier. "If I were only sure it
would kill him ... I'd kill myself directly," Cathy responds.
Analysis
Mrs. Dean narrates that Cathy cannot bear the idea of Edgar's
indifference, so "she increased her feverish bewilderment to Chapter 12 uses imagery and symbolism to blend themes and
madness and tore the pillow with her teeth," begging Mrs. Dean to create the chapter's foreboding tone, which reflects Cathy's
to open the window. Mrs. Dean refuses, and Cathy pulls the madness and desire to die. The imagery of death, the macabre,
feathers out of her pillow, which reminds her of a childhood and the grave is presented to the reader to heighten the sense
memory—when she and Heathcliff saw a nest of "little bird of danger as what was once love between Heathcliff and
skeletons." Cathy does not recognize her own face in a mirror, Cathy turns toward obsession. There's no longer any room in
and she sees visions: Mrs. Dean gathering "elf bolts" and a face Cathy's heart or mind for Edgar; her love for Heathcliff is too
in the "black press." She speaks of the first night she spent consuming.
alone after the fight, describing how she lost seven years,
The final image of a dog hanging from a noose is different from
going back to the time when Hindley separated her from
the other imagery in the chapter. Something truly violent has
Heathcliff, and how she woke up in the present "the wife of a
happened. Dogs, as symbols, appear when a boundary of some
stranger: an exile and outcast." She begs again for the
kind has been crossed. It suggests that Heathcliff, who until
windows to be opened; she longs to run on the moors and be a
now has hovered between his love for Cathy and the desire for
child again. Mrs. Dean refuses to open the window, saying "I
revenge, gives himself over to the latter. The violence against
won't give you your death of cold," but Cathy retorts, "You
the dog indicates the loss of his remaining humanity.
won't give me a chance of life, you mean." Then Cathy
remembers how she and Heathcliff use to play in the The symbol of ghosts evolves in this chapter as Cathy
graveyard and ask the ghosts to come. regresses to the past to tend to the wounds left from Hindley's
violence toward her and Heathcliff. And she longs for the
Edgar, hearing Mrs. Dean struggle to keep Cathy calm, enters
symbolic moors, for the freedom they represent, and for a time
the bedroom, and he realizes immediately that she has hidden
when she had a strong sense of herself and her affections and
Cathy's dangerous condition from him, but he rushes to Cathy.
feelings could be expressed freely. Now, she is stifled by a
She tells Edgar she will be dead by springtime: "They can't
husband she does not love and kept separate from the man
keep me from my narrow home ... my resting place." Edgar
toward whom she is naturally drawn. Having failed to choose
wants to know if this is all because she loves Heathcliff. "I don't
her true destiny, Cathy searches for a sense of belonging, even
want you," she tells Edgar. "What you touch at present you may
as she knows intuitively her destiny is leading her to death.
have; but my soul will be on that hilltop before you lay hands on
me again." Edgar blames Cathy's illness on Mrs. Dean, and, still The symbolism of wind departs from its usual association with
angry that her interference led to the fight, he tells her he will violence to represent life-giving breath. Violence is shifted from
he will dismiss her if she ever gossips to him again. Cathy, as its associations with natural elements such as weather to
delusional as she is, understands that Mrs. Dean has betrayed Cathy herself when Mrs. Dean refers to "the Earnshaws' violent
her and calls her a witch. Mrs. Dean leaves to find the doctor, dispositions," and in Cathy's self-harm, trying purposely to die,
Kenneth. being a redirection of her desire to kill Edgar.
Outside, Mrs. Dean sees "a creature of the other world." The way Mrs. Dean narrates raises the question: Is Cathy's
Actually, someone has hung Isabella's dog from a tree, and illness real, or is it a show? She paints it both ways; she takes
Mrs. Dean saves it. She hears the sound of horses' feet, but the blame, and she defends herself. And at the end of the
there is no time to inquire. Reaching the village, Kenneth tells chapter, she chooses not to alert Edgar to chase Isabella,
her there are rumors that Isabella and Heathcliff are planning which custom and honor would require him to do. Edgar risks
to run away together. The next day, a servant confirms the dishonor and scandal after all of his snobbery and dislike for
rumor—Isabella has run off with Heathcliff—and Edgar chooses Heathcliff, leaving the reader to wonder why. This is not the
not to send men to bring her back but disowns his sister for first, but one of many times in the novel when Edgar will not
"disowning" him. stand up for himself or those he loves against Heathcliff.
Chapter 13 Analysis
Two central questions in the novel are brought back into the
reader's mind: What makes people good and what makes them
Summary become bad? And, how can good come from a malevolent and
abusive environment? Hareton supplies the strongest example
Cathy has recovered from the brain fever, but she will never be
in the chapter when he threatens Isabella with a dog attack
the same. Also, she and Edgar are expecting a baby.
from Throttler in response to her kindness—even the name of
Mrs. Dean receives a letter from Isabella. In the letter, Isabella the dog underscores the violent Wuthering Heights
asks how Mrs. Dean "preserved the common sympathies of environment, just as the dog Skulker alludes to Thrushcross
human nature" while living at Wuthering Heights, and she asks Grange (throttle meaning to choke or strangle and skulk
"Is Heathcliff a man ... or a devil?" Then she describes her first meaning to hide in cowardice). And Hareton, by training and a
night at Wuthering Heights, where, arriving without Heathcliff, bad environment, is shown to be like an attack dog.
Joseph shoves a torch fire in her face, and Hareton threatens
That Isabella grew up not in the environment of Wuthering
to sic his dog Throttler on her. Inside, there is no servant to
Heights but in the gentle environment at Thrushcross Grange
help her, so she wanders around the house, eventually running
is significant because it provides a contrast and sets up a new
into Hindley, who has long, shaggy hair now, curses Heathcliff,
situation for the reader to witness firsthand what may become
and appears insane to Isabella. Hindley shows Isabella the
of good when it is surrounded by violence. Often in the novel,
pistol he embellished with a spring knife on the barrel. He lurks
major characters, in due course, enter into a battle between
outside Heathcliff's bedroom door every night, planning to kill
good and evil, pride and humility, pity and judgment, and
him if the door is ever unlocked. The only thing really stopping
Isabella's first test happens when she holds Hindley's gun and
him from killing Heathcliff is the chance to get back his money
it makes her feel powerful.
and Wuthering Heights. Holding the gun, Isabella is struck by
how powerful it makes her feel, which astonishes Hindley, and Earlier in the novel, Isabella and Edgar became foils to contrast
he jealously snatches the gun away from her. Cathy and Heathcliff: Edgar and Isabella shown to be spoiled
and petty while Cathy and Heathcliff are portrayed as strong,
In the kitchen, Joseph sticks his fingers in the oatmeal, so
free, and down to earth. In this chapter, the use of Isabella as a
Isabella offers to cook it, but Joseph yells at her for making it
foil changes. Cathy is more like Isabella was as a child, and
lumpy. Meanwhile Hareton drinks the milk they are supposed
Isabella appears to have grown stronger and humbler than
to share straight from the jar, getting his spit in it. Disgusted
Cathy. Making the connection, readers will be curious to see if
and exhausted from traveling, Isabella tries to find a bedroom
Wuthering Heights changes Isabella as Thrushcross Grange
to eat and rest in, but Joseph—angry at her for acting
has changed Cathy.
finicky—shows her there is nowhere for her to sleep. Heathcliff
keeps his bedroom locked, and no one is allowed inside.
Isabella throws the oatmeal on the floor, and Joseph leaves her
there, hoping Heathcliff sees her act that way, so he will beat Chapter 14
her. Just then, Throttler comes in, and Isabella realizes he's a
dog from Skulker's litter, a puppy Old Mr. Linton gave Hindley
long ago. Throttler nuzzles Isabella and eats the oatmeal off Summary
the floor. Then Isabella hides in Hareton's room until Joseph
comes upstairs to put him to bed. Finally, Isabella falls asleep in Mrs. Dean visits Isabella at Wuthering Heights. Before she
a chair by the fire. Heathcliff returns and wakes her up, asking leaves she asks Edgar to send a letter, forgiving Isabella. Edgar
why she is sleeping there. When she says it is because our replies he's not angry, just sorry for her, and he never wants to
bedroom is locked, he takes offence at the word our, saying "It see her again. Edgar's coldness depresses Mrs. Dean.
is not, nor ever shall be" their bedroom to share.
When Mrs. Dean arrives, she is shocked to find Heathcliff "was
the only thing there that seemed decent, that he would
certainly have struck a stranger as a born and bred gentleman Heathcliff is happy because he is certain Cathy loves him more
... and his wife as a thorough little slattern!" They discuss than she loves Edgar, he is better for her, and only he can
Cathy, and Mrs. Dean mentions she is nothing like the Cathy he match her depth of love, a direct echo of Cathy's earlier "I am
knew and that Edgar sustains his love for her by "the Heathcliff!" epiphany. The message for the love theme here is
remembrance of what she once was, by common humanity, that lovers must be alike in their natures for love to be true.
and a sense of duty!" Heathcliff hates the idea of Edgar having The contrast in the chapter between Heathcliff and Edgar also
only duty and humanity to make him feel for Cathy. He asks shows that Heathcliff has some qualities, he is capable of love,
Mrs. Dean "Do you imagine that I shall leave Cathy to his duty and he may not be a hero, but he is not the villain.
and humanity?" Heathcliff intends to visit Cathy, and he wants
Mrs. Dean to help him. Mrs. Dean tells Heathcliff a visit from
him would kill Cathy. Heathcliff wants to know if Cathy would Chapter 15
suffer if Heathcliff were to "go to extremes"—meaning harm
Edgar. Then he tells Mrs. Dean what makes him different from
Edgar is that he would never harm Edgar as long as Cathy
Summary
wanted to be with him. "If you don't believe me, you don't know
me," he tells Mrs. Dean when she looks doubtful.
Mr. Lockwood has heard Mrs. Dean's story and is retelling it in
a condensed version.
Mrs. Dean says Cathy has forgotten Heathcliff, which makes
him laugh: "for every thought she spends on Linton she spends
When Edgar's at church, Mrs. Dean gives Cathy a letter from
a thousand on me!" He says he was a fool to think Cathy ever
Heathcliff. Before she can get a response from Cathy,
loved Edgar, and, "It is not in him to be loved like me: how can
Heathcliff walks through the open doors of Thrushcross
she love in him what he has not?" Isabella tells Heathcliff to
Grange. Recognizing that Cathy is dying, he breaks down as
stop speaking of Edgar that way, but Heathcliff reminds her
they hold and kiss each other, both crying and talking about
that Edgar "turns you adrift on the world with surprising
Cathy's impending death. Cathy says Heathcliff and Edgar
alacrity." Mrs. Dean implores Heathcliff to treat Isabella better,
have both broken her heart, and to Heathcliff she says, "you
to remember she is a lady and accustomed to being waited on.
have killed me—and thriven on it, I think." She wants to hold
Heathcliff says Isabella is delusional ... that he never lied to her
Heathcliff until they are both dead. To Mrs. Dean, who refers to
about who he is and that she has an "innate admiration" of
herself as a cool spectator, it seems fitting "Cathy deem that
brutality.
heaven would be a land of exile to her," unless with death she
loses "her moral character also."
When Isabella goes upstairs, Heathcliff persuades Mrs. Dean
to sneak a letter to Cathy and arrange a visit at Thrushcross
Upset by being blamed for her death, Heathcliff asks if she is
Grange in the near future.
possessed by a devil to talk to him that way. Cathy also lashes
out at Mrs. Dean: "Nelly, you think you are more fortunate ...
you are sorry for me ... I shall be sorry for you. I shall be
Analysis incomparably beyond and above you all." Excited, Cathy stands
up, but the strain makes her convulse. Heathcliff and she
This chapter provides a window into Heathcliff's emotional
spring toward each other, and he "foamed like a mad dog, and
logic and moral values as he describes how he would treat
gathered her to him with greedy jealousy." Heathcliff accuses
Cathy if he were Edgar, why Isabella disgusts him, and what he
her of being cruel, of leaving him, betraying her own heart,
understands about himself. As Mrs. Dean tries to advise him on
because "degradation, and death, and nothing that God or
what is right and proper, he thwarts her with his own logic at
Satan could inflict would have parted us, you, of your own will,
every turn. The reader learns that pity, duty, charity, and
did it." Sobbing, Cathy tells him to leave her alone. She is dying
humanity, to Heathcliff, are shallow emotions and motivations.
for whatever she did wrong. She forgives him and asks that he
Heathcliff does not say explicitly what morality he believes in.
forgive her. He says he can forgive her for murdering him, but
Implicitly, his love for Cathy seems to be the basis for
not for killing herself.
Heathcliff's morality, the only thing about which he has strong
feelings of right and wrong. Mrs. Dean is nervous because Edgar will return soon, but
Cathy won't let Heathcliff leave. "Don't go," she cries, "It is the "incomparably beyond and above us all." Believing Cathy's
last time! I shall die! I shall die." Edgar appears in Cathy's room; spirit is at "home with God," Mrs. Dean sees in her corpse "a
Heathcliff holding her in his arms, but Cathy has fainted, so repose that neither earth nor hell can break," and she is
Edgar must tend to her instead of fighting with Heathcliff. Mrs. reassured of the eternal hereafter, "love in its sympathy," and
Dean thinks to herself "Far better that she should be dead, "love in its fullness." Mr. Lockwood comments that when Mrs.
than lingering a burden and a misery-maker to all about her." Dean originally told him the story she asked his opinion about
Heathcliff slips out, telling Mrs. Dean he will be hiding in the life after death, but he refused to answer, believing to do so
garden tomorrow. would go against the established church.
Mrs. Dean looks for Heathcliff to tell him the news of Cathy's
Analysis death, and she finds him still as a piece of timber beside an ash
tree outside Thrushcross Grange. At first, Mrs. Dean cries for
The narrator changes back to Mr. Lockwood, raising questions: Heathcliff, believing God has seen through his pride and
Will he alter Mrs. Dean's version of the story? What is the brought this humiliation and pain for a purpose. However, when
reason for the narrative switch? Is it out of character for Mrs. Heathcliff bashes his head against the tree and cries out for
Dean to wish Cathy dead as she does in this chapter? It is Cathy's spirit to haunt him, Mrs Dean admits, "It hardly moved
impossible to know now that another character stands my compassion—it appalled me: still, I felt reluctant to quit him
between Mrs. Dean and the reader. so."
The themes of good versus evil and love run together in Then Mrs. Dean offers to sneak Heathcliff into the house to
Chapter 15. The idea that going against the heart and soul see the corpse. She discovers he sneaked in on his own when
causes suffering is reinforced by Cathy and Heathcliff's she finds Edgar's blond hair on the floor and Heathcliff's dark
intense agony in the chapter. Then Heathcliff, the antihero hair replacing it inside Cathy's locket. She entwines the locks
himself, questions if his beloved is evil, and he judges her, of hair and describes Cathy's gravesite on the moors.
declaring everything is her fault and her choice. The idea of
"free will" is an important religious concept alluded to in this
chapter; it is central to the choice individuals make between Analysis
good and evil. The exploration of free will and people choosing
their own suffering begins here, and it will continue as the story The focus in this chapter is on Mrs. Dean's views on love, pity,
moves forward. and religion. Pointedly, Mrs. Dean stops her narration to ask
Mr. Lockwood his views on life after death, revealing a little
An exploration of unrequited love began with Isabella, and now more about his character: he either believes in the
it is more fully revealed in the exchange between Cathy and conventionality of the established church, or he is unwilling to
Heathcliff. Isabella suffered alone. There is an emotional speak in depth about religion or death. Either way, through his
difference (and tone difference in the chapters) when both character, Brontë continues to expose him for a shallow
lovers have loved and lost equally. gentleman-type from the city.
Mrs. Dean pities Heathcliff for his loss, yet she judges him,
Chapter 16 entwining the themes of pity versus judgment with pride versus
humiliation. In her pity (her word) for Heathcliff, Mrs. Dean
thinks to herself, "You have a heart and nerves as same as
your brother men! Why should you be anxious to conceal
Summary them? Your pride cannot blind God! You tempt him to wring
them, till he forces a cry of humiliation." Her ability to
Cathy gives birth to Catherine prematurely and then dies,
empathize is weakened by her instinct to judge—a strong
leaving Edgar without a male heir. Edgar sinks into mourning.
pattern playing out many times throughout the novel. The
Mrs. Dean says of Cathy's corpse that "no angel in heaven
reader, here, may pick up on the contradiction evolving through
could appear more beautiful," and adds that Cathy was right
Mrs. Dean's character. She is wholly able to describe the
when she said, only hours before her death, she would be
unusually intense love—which to her is selfish and Hindley stuck his arm and weapon (the gun with the knife on
irreverent—between Cathy and Heathcliff. If she did not the end) out of the door to kill Heathcliff, but he grabbed it, the
recognize what it is, she would not speak of it the way she spring fell back and sliced Hindley's arm instead. Heathcliff
does throughout the novel, noting details such as Heathcliff's smashed the glass in the door, got inside and beat Hindley,
"inner agony" and that he "trembled ... to his very fingerends." almost to death. When Hindley passed out, Heathcliff
Yet, she is always limited because the kind of love Heathcliff bandaged the wound, and Isabella ran for Joseph.
and Cathy share frightens and appalls her. So, why is she so
skilled in translating its nature to the reader? The next morning, Hindley came downstairs and Isabella told
him what happened because he couldn't remember. Heathcliff
The novel continues its reach for ideas beyond good and evil was there, but so deeply in mourning, his face was sealed "in
initiated in the previous chapter, as it moves away from the an expression of unspeakable sadness." (Then Mrs. Dean
dualism of angels and devils and good and evil toward the idea breaks in to scold Isabella for delighting in "paying wrong for
of something beyond or transcendent. wrong." Isabella admits the only way she can forgive Heathcliff
is "if [she] may take an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth.")
Isabella finishes telling her story: That night, she continued to
Chapter 17 taunt Heathcliff, but he was too absorbed in his anguish to
notice, until she struck a chord by saying Cathy was happy
before he came back into all of their lives again. Heathcliff's
Summary "eyes rained down tears among the ashes, and he drew his
breath in suffocating sighs." But Isabella pushed him further by
taunting him, and he threw a dinner knife at her, hitting her
Isabella, who is pregnant, runs away from Wuthering Heights
behind the ear. Terrified, Isabella, rushed out into the snow
and shows up unexpectedly at Thrushcross Grange, where the
across the moors to Thrushcross Grange.
household is still in mourning for Cathy. While Mrs. Dean
bandages her neck, which is bleeding from a knife Heathcliff
After telling her story, Isabella leaves for Gimmerton. She
flung at her, Isabella describes how Heathcliff, mourning for
settles south of London and raises her child, Linton, by herself.
Cathy, cries and prays to a senseless God—"like a Methodist,"
Mrs. Dean explains that Isabella ends up dying when the boy is
and he has confused God with the devil.
12 years old.
Then she explains why she ran away: One night, when Isabella
Meanwhile, right after Cathy's death, Edgar becomes a hermit,
was sitting in the parlor with Hindley, who was drunk and angry
but he loves and dotes on his daughter, Catherine. Mrs. Dean
at the time, Heathcliff returned. Hindley decided to lock
compares Edgar and Hindley: "They had both been fond
Heathcliff out of the house and wanted to know if Isabella
husbands ... and I couldn't see how they shouldn't both have
would help him kill Heathcliff, mentioning that they both had a
taken the same road, for good or evil." Hindley, she thinks, is
right to take revenge. Hindley asked her, "Are you as soft as
the weaker man because Edgar "displayed the true courage of
your brother," or "are you willing to endure to the last, and not
a loyal and faithful soul: he trusted God; and God comforted
attempt a repayment?" She responded, "Treachery and
him."
violence are spears pointed at both ends; they wound those
who resort to them worse than their enemies." Hindley Hindley dies six months after Cathy, and Heathcliff gets
disagreed; to him, "treachery and violence are a just return for custody of Hareton by threatening to take Linton from Isabella.
treachery and violence." Then he wanted to know if Isabella
would just be quiet and let him kill Heathcliff, but Isabella
shouted, "I'll not hold my tongue!" through the door and warned Analysis
Heathcliff. Hindley cursed her, and she contemplated what a
blessing it would be if Heathcliff and Hindley killed each other. Just as Isabella is a foil for Cathy's character in the novel,
Then, feeling secure with a door between them, Isabella Isabella and Heathcliff's relationship contrasts Cathy and
mocked Heathcliff, telling him now that Cathy is dead, he Heathcliff's relationship. Although, there are similarities as well:
should stretch himself over her grave and die like a faithful dog. both relationships involve violence of emotion, cursing, and
Dean expounds on Catherine's high-quality nature, so it is and Linton on the road. Linton is a physically weak and peevish
significant that Catherine's one fault is linked to her upper- child used to pampering. He refuses to exit the carriage. Then,
class station, and it causes the main action in the when he is in the house, he is too delicate to sit on a chair but
chapter—when she turns against Hareton for being a servant, must recline on a sofa.
not a gentleman, in an echo of her mother's rejection of
Heathcliff. Mrs. Dean's narration paints a picture of beauty and Mrs. Dean and Edgar worry that Heathcliff will want to take
peace, which turns ugly when social distinctions are made. Linton. That very same night, Joseph knocks on the door,
demanding to take Linton to Wuthering Heights. Edgar wants
The symbolism of dogs is woven throughout the chapter, and it to fulfill Isabella's dying wishes, but he cannot think of a way to
supports the topic of social distinctions between masters and keep Linton. Joseph and Edgar argue, but Edgar tells Joseph
servants: he will send Linton tomorrow.
proper gentleman, and Heathcliff has even hired a tutor for has been so close all this time, and that Heathcliff is her uncle.
Linton. "I thought I liked you," Catherine tells him. Then she asks if she
can visit Linton often, and Heathcliff has to tell her about his
quarrel with Edgar: "He thought me too poor to wed his sister ...
Analysis his pride was hurt, and he'll never forgive it." Catherine thinks
her father is in the wrong, so she suggests Linton come to
In this chapter, Joseph and Heathcliff provide a few rare Thrushcross Grange to visit instead, but Linton says four miles
instances of humor in the novel. is too far for him to walk. This disgusts Heathcliff, and he tells
Mrs. Dean "I covet Hareton with all his degradation ... I'd have
Everything about Linton (his demeanor, upper-class manners,
loved the lad had he been someone else." Linton irritates
and physical appearance) associates him with the weaker but
Heathcliff even more by ignoring Catherine and preferring to
more civilized inhabitants of Thrushcross Grange. Linton
sit quietly, so Heathcliff calls Hareton over and suggests he
obviously does not belong at Wuthering Heights, and his
show Catherine around the farm.
situation is an example of the doubling that occurs throughout
the second half of the novel. In this chapter, history repeats When Catherine sees Hareton, she asks Heathcliff, "Oh, I'll ask
(always with a twist) the event of Heathcliff's being brought you uncle ... that is not my cousin, is he?" Catherine whispers
from Liverpool to live at Wuthering Heights. Now it's his son, something about Hareton in Heathcliff's ear, embarrassing
but conversely, Linton is the exact opposite of Heathcliff in Hareton, but Heathcliff brushes it off, and they go play.
every way. Heathcliff tells Mrs. Dean how Hareton is the better boy than
Linton, and "he can sympathise with all his feelings, having felt
To carry suspense through the novel, Heathcliff tells Mrs. Dean
them myself." He explains how he taught Hareton to hate
(and the reader) exactly how he will continue his revenge on
everything beyond the physical, conditioning him to live in a
Hindley and Edgar by using Linton and Hareton.
state of ignorance. Then Linton, regretting his decision to stay
behind, catches up to Catherine and Hareton just as Catherine
is asking why it says "Hareton Earnshaw" above the door
Chapter 21 (revealed in a previous chapter), but Hareton cannot read, so
he does not know what it says—and Catherine and Linton do
not tell him. Instead, they tease him for not being able to read,
Summary which causes Heathcliff to "cast a look of singular aversion" at
Linton and Catherine. Mrs. Dean decides she doesn't like
Mrs. Dean remembers a conversation she had in Gimmerton Linton either, and she doesn't blame Heathcliff "for holding him
with Zillah, the servant at Wuthering Heights. Zillah tells Mrs. cheap."
Dean Heathcliff dislikes Linton and would dislike him even
more if he knew to what extent Linton pampers himself. Mrs. Catherine returns to Thrushcross Grange and scolds her
Dean comes to the conclusion "that utter lack of sympathy had father for lying to her about Linton living far away. Edgar
rendered young Heathcliff selfish and disagreeable." explains why Catherine cannot return to Wuthering Heights or
contact Linton, but she writes to him anyway, until Mrs. Dean
The story jumps ahead to Catherine's sixteenth birthday. Out discovers the letters and makes Catherine burn them.
on the moors, Hareton and Heathcliff, whom Catherine has
never met before, catch her when she wanders onto his
property. Catherine, remembering meeting Hareton a few Analysis
years earlier, wants to know if Hareton is Heathcliff's son.
Heathcliff entices Catherine to come to Wuthering Heights by The chapter opens up with a reference to Linton as "young
telling her that Hareton is not his son, but he does have a son Heathcliff," alerting the reader to the doubles in the chapter,
and she knows him. making Linton a distorted mirror image of Heathcliff as a child
to reinforce ideas of pity versus judgment in the novel. (It is
At Wuthering Heights, Catherine and Linton see each other for important to note that pity is not used in the modern sense; it is
the first time since they met. Catherine is astounded that he more like having sympathy for or empathy with than feeling
The complex structure of the chapter creates an in-depth Mrs. Dean says the news made Catherine's heart "cloudy now
exploration of the value of physical strength and genuineness in double darkness ... her features were so sad, they did not
(Hareton) versus intellectual power and upper class pride seem hers." Believing Heathcliff is telling the truth, Catherine
(Linton and Catherine). The reader cannot help but feel convinces Mrs. Dean to travel to Wuthering Heights the next
sympathy for Hareton when he cannot read his own name day.
above the door. The reader cannot help but like Hareton and
despise Linton, seeing his bad effect on Catherine's character.
Soon after, Catherine and Linton's relationship grows through Analysis
purely intellectual activities. However, Mrs. Dean does not see
real value or love between Catherine and Linton because it Powerful imagery is used to reveal Catherine's character and
isn't based on anything physical. The idea that love should have show how she is different from Cathy. Catherine is earthy and
a physical—not necessarily in a sexual sense—component is an unselfish, able to empathize and think ahead, whereas Cathy
unusual one in Victorian England, which tended to privilege the was impatient and fiery, allowing momentary circumstances to
intellect and spirit above things of the body. make her ill. Catherine is a good listener, and she takes Mrs.
Dean's advice; Cathy was sassy with Mrs. Dean. Catherine and
Cathy are not exact opposites; Catherine's love of nature and
animals reflects Cathy's character, and Catherine, like her
mother, is spirited and emotional by nature, acting out of Mrs. Dean and her father during the day and sneaks over to
natural affection rather than her father's artificial mannerliness. Wuthering Heights to care for Linton every night.
Catherine's inherent goodness and empathy offer a potential
correction to the chaos that Cathy's selfishness unleashed.
Analysis
The nature imagery in the chapter is used metaphorically.
Thorns and stickers represent Cathy's moral dilemma. Catherine and Linton's lack of passion contrasts with Cathy
Catherine is stuck, and Heathcliff uses guilt to make her feel and Heathcliff's all-consuming love. Catherine's visit mirrors an
more stuck and to separate her from Mrs. Dean—represented event from the past—when Edgar visits Cathy and she has a
by the wall between them. In the previous chapter, Mrs. Dean violent tantrum and manipulates Edgar into staying afterward.
describes Catherine's eyes as "radiant with cloudless Edgar is the proper gentleman in the past encounter; Cathy the
pleasure." In this chapter, the meeting with Heathcliff causes spoiled indulged child. Here, Catherine is the nurse, and Linton
Mrs. Dean to say Catherine's "heart was clouded in double is the spoiled indulged child. Further, their physical interactions
darkness." A downpour of rain signals the turn in the plot are cold, lifeless, and clinical; they disappoint Catherine, who is
toward stormier times ahead. eager for a romance. Linton's illness also reflects a difference
from the past: Cathy suffered from a broken heart. Linton is
shown to be insufferable. The symbolic ghost of the past
Chapter 23 lingers in the present when Linton and Catherine argue over
their fathers' different versions of the truth, and it creates a
loose dramatic irony that flows through the novel—the reader
Summary knows much more about the past than Linton and Catherine.
The reader gets a front row seat to the effects of different
Catherine and Mrs. Dean cross the moors to visit Linton. The combinations of mixed bloodlines and environments—nature
day before, Heathcliff told Catherine that Linton is dying and nurture—over time, while the characters are
because she stopped writing her letters to him. When they unknowledgeable about where they come from and what
arrive, Linton tells Catherine not to kiss him because it takes exactly is influencing their behavior.
his breath away. He is angry he had to write to her because it
tired him and then his father blamed him, saying he is a "painful,
shuffling, worthless thing" because Catherine never visits. "Are Chapter 24
you glad to see me?" Catherine asks many times. Linton says
he wants to marry her so she will take care of him. Catherine
says being brother and sister is better, that husbands and Summary
wives sometimes hate each other. This leads to an argument
about their fathers. Catherine defends Edgar and Linton Michael, a servant who works in the stables, has been helping
defends Heathcliff. Angry, Catherine shoves Linton's chair, Catherine sneak out in exchange for books. Mrs. Dean catches
causing him to choke and cough. Catherine returning from visiting Linton at Wuthering Heights.
Catherine, distressed by lying, confesses all the details to Mrs.
Catherine apologizes, saying, "I couldn't have been hurt by that
Dean. At first, the visits go well, and Zillah makes everything
little push, and I had no idea that you could, either." Linton does
comfortable for Catherine and Linton. One night, Hareton tries
not accept Catherine's apology, but when she tries to leave, he
to impress Catherine by showing her that he can read his name
writhes on the floor in agony "determined to be as grievous
above the door, but Catherine laughs at him when he can't
and harassing as he can be," according to Mrs. Dean.
decipher the numbers. Then she goes inside to visit with
Catherine spends another hour trying to make him
Linton. Hareton, a while later, bursts into the room and throws
comfortable, propping his pillows and reciting poetry for him
Linton on the floor. Then he shoves him and Catherine into the
while he leans on her for support.
kitchen. Linton screams that he'll kill Hareton for this, and then
Back at Thrushcross Grange, Mrs. Dean catches a cold that chokes so violently, blood comes out of his mouth. Catherine
incapacitates her for three weeks. Catherine diligently nurses runs for Zillah, but when they return, Hareton is carrying Linton
upstairs to his room. Joseph laughs at Catherine and Linton, upstairs and tries to apologize, matching Catherine's nature
happy to see justice served in Hareton's realization that he is completely. Joseph supplies the idea of justice (his glee over
the true master of Wuthering Heights. Catherine ignores Hareton getting the first inklings of it), which is always hidden
Joseph and leaves on her pony soon after. Hareton catches up nearby when ideas about pride, humility, judgment, and pity are
to her out on the moors, trying to apologize, but Catherine being explored.
lashes him with her whip, and he curses and gallops away.
Catherine also tells Mrs. Dean about a quarrel she had with
Linton over their different visions of a perfect day. Then
Chapter 25
Catherine begs Mrs. Dean not to tell Edgar, so she can
continue to see Linton. Mrs. Dean promises to consider it, and
then goes directly to Edgar, telling him everything. Edgar
Summary
forbids Catherine from visiting Wuthering Heights.
In the present, Mrs. Dean encourages Mr. Lockwood to
consider a romance with Catherine. Then she rewinds the
Analysis story to a little less than a year ago when Edgar's death is
imminent. Linton has been writing letters pressuring Edgar to
Catherine's character has a unique relationship with the allow him to marry Catherine. Edgar considers the marriage,
servants in the novel, and Brontë uses the difference between and Mrs. Dean reassures him with the idea that Catherine will
her and the other characters to explore how pride is be rewarded in the marriage because she does her duty. He
destructive but humility overcomes class prejudices and leads has set aside a yearly income for Catherine, but the only way
to justice. Catherine sees the servants for who they are. She for her to live permanently at Thrushcross Grange is through
respects them, knows their hopes and aspirations, helps them, marriage with Linton, the male heir. Edgar agrees to let Mrs.
and calls them by their first names. Slowly but steadily, Dean accompany Catherine weekly to see Linton out on the
love interest in the second half of the novel, Linton, morally how kind Catherine was when she did not have to be. Linton
weak and physically dying, is a failed romantic hero; he lacks will not tell Mrs. Dean where the bedroom key is. Mrs. Dean
the charismatic energy necessary to bend the universe to his calls Linton a heartless, selfish boy, but she perceives "the
will, be a champion of individuality, and overcome the dark wretched creature had no power to sympathize with his
forces of his father's hatred to be Catherine's champion. The cousin's mental tortures."
chapter is built to expose Linton for all that he really is: once
the threat of violence is gone, Linton turns back to his upper- Mrs. Dean rushes out and runs across the moors to
class, spoiled nature. Catherine is emerging the true romantic Thrushcross Grange. She sends servants back to break
hero of the story-within-the-story. She physically fights Catherine out of Wuthering Heights. She tells Edgar a softened
Heathcliff, and though he overpowers her, she does not give in version of what happened. Edgar tells Mrs. Dean to call Mr.
to flaws that subsume other characters. Since the beginning of Green, his lawyer, to change the will. But unknowing the whole
her relationship with Linton, Catherine has been the romantic truth—that Linton is also dying—Edgar only slightly makes
pursuer, transgressing traditional (for the time the novel was changes to the will: Thrushcross Grange will be left to any male
Heathcliff's larger role of antihero in the novel is temporarily The servants come back without Catherine, believing a lie
dropped to villain status. Mrs. Dean literally calls him "villain" to Heathcliff tells. Mrs. Dean plans to send more armed servants
make it clear, and the idea is woven throughout the chapter; it tomorrow, but Catherine shows up in the morning. She
hardly needs declaration. Whatever hope the reader had of sneaked out with a little help from Linton. Keeping Heathcliff's
redemption for the antihero Heathcliff, it is annihilated in this crimes to herself, Catherine sits quietly with Edgar as he dies.
chapter with his gruesome, Gothic notion—when he suggests Mr. Green finally shows up; he works for Heathcliff now, and he
cutting into and eating the children while they are alive, and for fires all of the servants except Mrs. Dean; Heathcliff allows
Chapter 28 Analysis
The horror of Linton's behavior, mirroring Heathcliff's cruelty, is
meant to arouse an intense emotional response, as Linton
Summary surprises the reader with one shocking revelation relishing
violence and power over Catherine after another, all while he
Mrs. Dean, freed from imprisonment in Zillah's room, looks for pretends to be innocent. Women have limited legal rights, and
Catherine. She finds out from Linton that Catherine is still even a man like Edgar, gentle and loving toward his daughter,
locked in his bedroom. Acting innocent and sucking on a piece leaves her powerless in the world. Linton may be weak, and
of candy, Linton tells Mrs. Dean, Heathcliff "says I'm not to be thus superficially resemble the gentle Edgar, but Brontë makes
soft ... she's my wife ... it's shameful that she should wish to it clear that weakness is not the same thing as deliberate
leave me" and that Catherine wants all of Linton's money. gentleness, and Linton's weakness does not prevent his
Linton tells Mrs. Dean he will never let her leave. He says cruelty.
everything that was hers is his now: "All her nice books ... her
pretty birds ... her pony Minny," and he told Catherine the same The limitations of Linton's and Catherine's understanding of
when she offered them to him as a bribe to unlock the their marriage create another moment of dramatic irony: Linton
bedroom, so she can see Edgar before he dies. She even is glad to have his cousin's possessions and pony, like one
offers her locket with Edgar and Cathy's pictures inside, but child jealous of another's toy, and is oblivious to his father's
Linton says those are his too, and he tears the locket from her larger goal of revenge. Catherine, frantic to go home to her
neck. Heathcliff comes when Catherine screams; he smashes father, has no sense of the permanent damage she has caused
the locket with his foot and hits Catherine on the mouth. Linton herself to gain a few moments at Edgar's bedside.
admits it made him glad, until her mouth filled with blood. Mrs.
Dean is horrified by Linton's behavior, and she reminds him The limitations of the law, which Heathcliff exploits for the
property within families, as a way to control everything Heathcliff tells Mrs. Dean not to visit her at Wuthering Heights.
Yet, Mrs. Dean pities more than judges at a place in the novel Analysis
where if ever there were a time to judge and cry out for justice,
it would be now, driving deeper a core message in the pity Heathcliff calls Catherine a "boastful champion," reinforcing
versus judgment theme. Here is the extreme example of a the idea of Catherine being the romantic hero of the story-
"heartless" and "selfish" character, but pity still holds greater within-the-story.
value than judgment. Mrs. Dean's words reflect the heart of the
Linton, a failed hero in Chapter 27, villainous in Chapter 28, has
theme: "You could pity your own suffering; and she pitied them,
transformed into a nervous wreck that "wakes and shrieks in
too; but you won't pity hers!" Mrs. Dean, who advocates pity
the night by the hour." It is significant that Heathcliff tells Mrs.
throughout the novel, does not give in to revenge or violence.
Dean his "presence is as potent on [Linton's] nerves as a
ghost" moments before revealing Cathy's ghost is haunting
The night Linton dies, Catherine is silent and exhausted. Catherine's predicament—being Linton's sole caregiver, alone
Heathcliff asks her how she feels, and she tells him "you have with the horror of death—is a very Gothic scenario, and it
left me so long to struggle against death alone, that I feel and continues the exploration of apathy from Chapter 27.
see only death." Zillah gives Catherine some wine, and Heathcliff leaves Catherine to fend for herself or choose
Heathcliff leaves her alone for a fortnight. When Catherine apathy. Here, apathy equals violence—if the reader carries
emerges from her room, she is angry with everyone because of Catherine's alternate choice through to its conclusion and
all she's gone through: "When I would have given my life for envisions the horror of Catherine actually leaving Linton to die
one kind word ... all kept off." Zillah says, "The more hurt she utterly alone. Also, Zillah finds pity for Catherine at times, but
gets, the more venomous she grows." she shuts the door to shut out her feelings. This illustrates how
fear is stronger than pity, and it shows how fear creates
In the aftermath of Linton's death, Zillah encourages a apathy. Zillah is not entirely against Catherine; she is unwilling
romance between Catherine and Hareton, to which Mrs. Dean to risk her job, but she does advise Catherine to pursue a
objects. Zillah says, "You happen to think your young lady too relationship with Hareton. This demonstrates the powerful
fine for Mr. Hareton ... but I own I should love well to bring her impact servants have in their masters' lives; how much
pride a peg lower ... what will all her learning and daintiness do servants are willing to risk for their masters, or how much
for her now?" Zillah also tells Mrs. Dean that Heathcliff coerced empathy they have for them, can alter their destinies or
Linton to sign a will leaving Thrushcross Grange to him, but dramatically affect their emotional wellbeing.
since Linton is a minor, he couldn't leave the land; it belongs to
Catherine. But having no money or friends, Mrs. Dean Zillah points out that Catherine is poorer than she and Mrs.
supposes, Catherine will not be able take the house from Dean, highlighting the reality for privileged women from the
Heathcliff. Mrs. Dean considers renting a cottage for her and novel's time; under the wrong circumstances, it is better to be a
Catherine to live in, but she knows Heathcliff would never allow servant earning a wage than a woman of privilege under the
it. rule of a cruel male tyrant—husband or relative.
Mrs. Dean's story has ended. Mr. Lockwood tells the reader he
plans to go back to London, so he's going to visit Wuthering Chapter 31
Heights to tell Heathcliff he's leaving.
Now, in the parlor with Catherine and Hareton, Mr. Lockwood explanations or Mr. Lockwood's observations as he walks
drops the note on Catherine's lap. "What is that?" she asks through the Wuthering Heights "jealous gate," always fastened.
loudly, and Hareton confiscates it. Embarrassed (afraid they The knowledge of the characters is unlocked, and the reader is
will think the letter is from him), Mr. Lockwood explains that it's free to choose between pity and judgment while witnessing the
from Mrs. Dean. Catherine ignores Mr. Lockwood, but he urges characters' present day behaviors and interactions.
her to speak with him; Mrs. Dean will expect a reply of some
And now, the reader also has the ability to assess Mr.
sort. "Does Ellen like you?" Catherine asks. "Yes, very well," Mr.
Lockwood's character accurately. As the chapter progresses
Lockwood replies. Catherine tells him to tell Mrs. Dean that she
the reader will be able to measure Mr. Lockwood's
would write, but she doesn't have any paper—or books.
observations against the reader's own interpretations. When
Mentioning books brings up an ongoing argument between
Mr. Lockwood first met Heathcliff, Catherine, and Hareton, the
Hareton and Catherine. She teases Hareton, in front of Mr.
reader saw these figures through his eyes, and may have
Lockwood, about the way he sounds when he's trying to read
judged them to be uncouth and impolite, as he did. Now, the
aloud. She accuses Hareton of spitefully stealing all of her
reader parts ways with Mr. Lockwood: he knows their
books, and when Hareton offers to give them back, she tells
circumstances, but is too pompous and oblivious to feel
him they are debased and "profaned in his mouth!" She never
empathy for them, and he makes himself ridiculous in the
wants them back. Hareton, embarrassed, hits Catherine, and
reader's eyes by imagining that it would be "more romantic
Mr. Lockwood thinks, "The little wretch had done her utmost to
than a fairy tale" for him to carry Catherine off. The reader,
hurt her cousin's sensitive though uncultivated feelings, and a
knowing the characters' backstories now, is much more likely
physical argument was the only mode he had of balancing the
to pity them and to empathize with their unhappiness.
account."
When he arrives at Wuthering Heights, the gate is unlocked, so righted the wrongs of the past generation by rising above
Mr. Lockwood has an opportunity to eavesdrop on a pride. Happiness, love, and peace are rewards for their
conversation between Hareton and Catherine in the kitchen. openness and humanity toward one another.
Catherine is teaching Hareton to read, and giving him slaps and
kisses as rewards or reprimands, which makes Mr. Lockwood
bitterly jealous, since Catherine is so beautiful. Chapter 33
Once inside, Mrs. Dean says Mr. Lockwood will have to pay his
rent to Catherine. Or, he can settle with Mrs. Dean, since she
helps Catherine with the household finances now. Mr.
Summary
Lockwood is confused. Mrs. Dean explains that he must not
In the present, Mrs. Dean explains the events leading up to
have heard; Heathcliff died three months earlier. As Mrs. Dean
Heathcliff's death to Mr. Lockwood.
explains how he died, she first explains how Catherine and
Hareton became friends "by both their minds tending to the
One day, Catherine and Hareton infuriate Joseph by ripping up
same point." Mrs. Dean says she is glad Mr. Lockwood did not
his currant trees to plant a flower garden. Later Joseph
try to win Catherine's heart. The "crown of all her wishes" is
complains to Heathcliff and threatens to leave. He calls
that Catherine and Hareton will marry.
Catherine the devil's temptress and accuses her of casting a
spell on Hareton. He thinks Mrs. Dean's song about fairies is
evil too. Heathcliff has recently come home, and seeing
Analysis Catherine and Hareton being peaceful and loving disturbs him.
He yells at Catherine for daring to alter Joseph's garden, or
This chapter is connected to the underlying meaning in the
touch even a stick at Wuthering Heights, but when she
novel's title. Mrs. Dean, Catherine, and Hareton have withstood
responds that he's stolen her money and Hareton's and that
the wuthering atmosphere and Heathcliff's stormy violence and
Hareton will defend her now, Heathcliff grabs her by the hair.
revenge. Also, the chapter contains a nod to the servant's role
Hareton begs him not to hurt Catherine, just this one time, and
in the lives of the privileged when Mr. Lockwood asks the new
he tries to pry Heathcliff's fingers out of Catherine's hair.
servant, "Are you the housekeeper?" and her response—I keep
the house—implies she does so much more than dust and The next night, they all quietly eat dinner together, and after
sweep. The reader has learned through observing Mrs. Dean signaling for Catherine and Hareton to leave the table,
that a servant can love, protect, and serve with the fierce Heathcliff opens up to Mrs. Dean: "It is a poor conclusion, is it
loyalty of a family member, and servants wield a significant not," he begins, and he continues, "I get levers and mattocks to
amount of power over their masters' happiness and fate. demolish the two houses ... now would be the precise time to
revenge myself ... but where is the use? I don't care for striking
The motif of locked doors, walls, and windows signifying
... that sounds as if I had been labouring the whole time only to
boundaries and social isolation as characters search for where
exhibit a fine trait of magnanimity." Heathcliff tells Mrs. Dean
they belong, comes to its resolution: all the doors, windows,
he has changed, and he feels strange. Hareton seems more
and gates are unlocked. The dynamic between Catherine and
like a personification of his youth than a human being;
Hareton is significant in this context; they have crossed the
Heathcliff tells Mrs. Dean that "Hareton's aspect was the ghost
boundaries between them, symbolized by Catherine's blond
of my immortal love; of my wild endeavours to hold my right: my
ringlets intermingling with Hareton's brown locks. Catherine
degradation, my pride, my happiness, and my anguish."
and Hareton have made peace through books. Earlier in the
Heathcliff's words worry Mrs. Dean. She wants to know if he is
novel, the question of which is more valuable, physical strength
afraid to die. Heathcliff says he is yearning to attain it with his
and humility or intellectual power is presented. Catherine and
whole being.
Hareton balance the two when Catherine drops her false pride
over being more educated than Hareton. This resolves the past
(when Hindley took Heathcliff's opportunity for education
away). Hindley was the true villain all along, and his cruelty set
in motion a cycle of unhappiness. The present generation has
Analysis
Chapter 34
The structure of the chapter takes Heathcliff quickly through
the steps necessary to draw the conclusion that Heathcliff's
Summary love is entirely obsession and he has chosen Cathy over
redemption. It would have been tempting to imagine Heathcliff
A strange illness overtakes Heathcliff and changes his being redeemed by Hareton and Catherine's happier
personality. He is restless; he can't eat and he's unusually reincarnation of his romance with Cathy, but Brontë makes the
bright and cheerful. Mrs. Dean is curious why. Heathcliff laughs issue more complex than that. Heathcliff is "within the sight of
and tells her, "Last night, I was on the threshold of hell. To-day, my heaven," which suggests that he still lives in a moral
I am within sight of my heaven." Mrs. Dean, perplexed, wonders universe centered around his and Cathy's love, rather than any
if he's a ghoul or vampire, going as far as to remember larger spiritual or moral code. Since her death, Heathcliff has
Heathcliff's whole life and how when Mr. Earnshaw brought always longed for the company of Cathy's ghost, so it will not
Heathcliff home, "the little dark thing was harboured by a good be surprising when he rejects Mrs. Dean's offer to fetch a
man to his bane." She shakes off her thoughts as superstitious, minister. It is understandable what Heathcliff means by heaven
then she sees a vision of Heathcliff's grave, which comes true when he says, "I tell you I have nearly attained my heaven; and
a few days later. that of others is altogether unvalued and uncoveted by me."
Heaven means being with Cathy, and Cathy, while alive, made
Meanwhile, Heathcliff's good mood confuses Hareton too. the same choice. The novel seems to suggest, for Heathcliff,
— Heathcliff, Chapter 1 Cathy shares her intuition with young Mrs. Dean after
accepting Edgar's marriage proposal. Cathy's presentiment,
visions, and intuition will increase as the plot twists and turns
Heathcliff is referring to his dogs, but unbeknownst to Mr.
from this point forward.
Lockwood in this moment, Heathcliff has treated the children in
his care, Hareton and Catherine, similarly—he both owns them
and discourages their education, domestication, or highborn
manners, foreshadowing how the children will behave as "My love for Linton is like the
nastily as the dogs when Mr. Lockwood meets them. foliage in the woods: time will
change it ... as winter changes the
"Proud people breed sad sorrows trees. My love for Heathcliff
for themselves." resembles the eternal rocks
beneath ... Nelly, I am Heathcliff!"
— Mrs. Dean, Chapter 7
— Cathy, Chapter 9
Mrs. Dean's advice to Heathcliff carries a main message in the
novel and reveals the core of the theme of Pride versus
Humility. Cathy discerns between her temporal love for Edgar and her
eternal love for Heathcliff; comparing Heathcliff to an eternal
rock has religious associations, and in some ways, Cathy and
Heathcliff's love has a religious quality to it. She feels as he
"Wish and learn to ... change the
feels, and, in her perception, they share one being.
fiends to confident, innocent
angels, suspecting and doubting
"I'll go make peace with Edgar
nothing, and always seeing friends
Cathy is so happy when Heathcliff returns that she reconciles Isabella's "delusional love" contrasts with Cathy's "eternal" love
with God and promises to be good, and, in this instance, makes connection with Heathcliff. This is Isabella's moment of clarity,
up with her husband after a fight. The motif of angels and as she struggles to free herself from false love.
devils supports the theme of good versus evil throughout
Wuthering Heights.
"Treachery and violence are
"You fight against that devil for spears pointed at both ends; they
love as long as you may: when the wound those who resort to them
time comes, not all the angels in worse than their enemies."
— Hindley, Chapter 13
Through Isabella's rejecting an opportunity for revenge, a core
message about violence is delivered to the reader, as her
Hindley wants to kill Heathcliff, but it will take away his chance character contrasts with Heathcliff and Hindley, and she is the
to leave his son an inheritance. The "devil" is both Heathcliff one character who escapes Wuthering Heights.
and an impulse stopping Hindley from killing Heathcliff. This
play on words emphasizes how much Hindley has gone over to
the dark side; he is referring to a good impulse—not to kill—as "One hoped, and the other
a "devil."
despaired: they chose their own
loss, and were righteously doomed
"It is not in him to be loved like me:
to enjoy them."
how can she love in him what he
has not?" — Mrs. Dean, Chapter 17
— Heathcliff, Chapter 17 nature than Linton because she can use it to forgive his bad
nature. Her use of the word revenge here actually extends the
positive connotation of her earlier words. Using verbal irony,
The battering of the wuthering wind on trees symbolizes the
she is both sympathizing with Heathcliff and comforting herself
effect of a violent or negative environment on individuals, as
with the knowledge he is miserable and lonely.
Heathcliff intentionally seeks to lower Hareton from his
birthright as a gentleman into the position of an uneducated
servant.
l Symbols
"One is gold put to the use of
paving-stones, and the other is tin Ghosts
polished to ape a service of silver."
— Heathcliff, Chapter 21 Ghosts symbolize lost souls, memory, and the past in
Wuthering Heights, and Brontë uses this symbol to support the
themes of love and obsession and good versus evil. Cathy's
The contrast between Hareton and Linton's innate character
ghost lingers in Heathcliff's memory, supporting love and
traits reinforces a core message about erroneous class
obsession, and then it actively and vengefully pursues
distinctions. "Service of silver" signifies the tea service
Heathcliff in the end, supporting good versus evil.
performed daily by servants for unworthy masters.
Chapter 32 when Mr. Lockwood, observing Catherine and believes he is good, but having no qualities of love or the good
Hareton, sees Catherine's blond hair dangling and mingling established in the novel (pity, humility) serves to create an
with Hareton's dark hair, representing love overcoming good environment on the side of evil instead of good.
and evil and a restored peace and unity.
Good versus Evil for the divine, and personal judgment between individuals,
which is always accompanied with a choice between judgment
and pity. Generally, a lack of pity leads to pain, injustice, and
suffering for the person judged, making the thematic
An exploration of religious-based ideas of good and evil create statement that to judge others is harmful to them, unjust, and
the primary theme in Wuthering Heights, and the themes of not a right reserved for human beings. Repeatedly, the reader
judgment versus pity, love and obsession, and violence and is provoked to feel pity over judgment for the characters, even
revenge, which are also religiously rooted, support it. The four Heathcliff and Hindley, and shown the disturbing results of an
lesser themes indicate individual choices, which add up to absence of pity, such as Linton's treatment of Catherine and
either good or evil. Pity, humility, love and forgiveness—the his ensuing horrible death.
opposite of revenge—add up to choosing good; judgment,
pride, obsession, and violence add up to choosing evil. The first Commentary on class distinctions is woven into the judgment
half of the novel explores the idea of natural inclinations versus pity theme. The servants are always expected to feel
toward one or the other—good or evil—through a repetition and sympathy for their masters. Masters are inclined to judge, and
juxtaposition of devil and angel imagery and biblical references are usually portrayed to lack pity. When servants lack pity at
as the narrator, Mrs. Dean, wonders if Heathcliff and Cathy are, times—Zillah toward Catherine and Mrs. Dean toward
or will turn out to be, good or evil. During this section, Brontë Cathy—the judged characters devolve into mean-spirited,
explores how an environment might influence characters selfish, or destructive behavior, demonstrating the ill of
toward good or evil. Ideas of freewill and personal choice to judgment and the benevolent power of pity.
suffer begin in the middle of the narrative around the time
Pride versus humility is a thematic extension of judgment
when Hindley renounces God and spirals into villainy. Once
versus pity: the prideful are judgmental and the humble are
Brontë's complex argument is in place and ideas of natural
sympathetic, or in other words, capable of pity. However, the
character tendencies, role of environment, and freewill are
results are different in that judgment injures the judged
established, the second half of the novel shows individual
individual, the individual acted upon, whereas pride brings
characters, who lean toward the good—Catherine, Isabella,
sorrow to the prideful, the individual taking wrong action.
Hareton, Edgar, and Mrs. Dean—battling evil represented by
Further, humility, manifested in serving and doing one's duty,
Heathcliff. Then the theme culminates with Heathcliff's ultimate
brings reward to the humble, whereas pity is not linked to
choice between good and evil. His choice locks him out of
reward. The conclusion of the theme plays out in Catherine's
heaven and casts him into a hellish state, condemned to
story line; having completed her duty in caring for the dying,
spiritually wander the moors with Cathy, who also rejected
once she is humble enough to drop her pride toward Hareton,
heaven and religion when she was alive.
she is rewarded by having Thrushcross Grange and happiness
Mrs. Dean's character is the representative of the good restored to her with the added bonus of love.
qualities of love, pity, humility, and forgiveness. Heathcliff and
Cathy represent the evil choices of violence, revenge, pride,
selfishness, judgment, and obsession. Joseph's character
stands in the middle, representing religious hypocrisy, as he
Through Hindley and Heathcliff's relationship, Brontë begins a The setting of the two opposing households, Wuthering
complex argument about the effects of physical violence. Her Heights and Thrushcross Grange, combined with the
first point is to show how abuse creates abusive, vengeful symbolism of the moors between them and Cathy's wandering
individuals when they do not forgive and turn violent to lessen ghost highlights the devastating isolation individuals feel while
their pain. Isabella represents the wise individual who searching and seeking a sense of belonging. Human beings,
understands the true nature of violence and its consequences. Brontë demonstrates through this theme, must align with their
She delivers the message for the theme when she says true destinies, whether they—figuratively speaking—encounter
violence wounds the person who chooses it. Next, through walls they must climb over, discover windows and doors barred
Linton's relationship with Heathcliff, Brontë shows how apathy and locked, or set out on a journey to explore. They innately
is created by violence and the fear of violence, again, by a know where they belong; visions, presentiments, and dreams
desire to avoid pain. Through Hareton and Linton, Brontë will guide them, and the development of a good character will
demonstrates how neglect and apathy can be violent. In this lead them to the persons and places in which they can at last
way, attributes, such as the ones Heathcliff hates—duty, feel a sense of peace and unity.
compassion, charity, and kindness—become opposites of
violence, actions with which to fight the evils of violence and
revenge.
e Suggested Reading
Brontë, Emily, and Daphne Merkin. Wuthering Heights. New
Love and Obsession York: Barnes & Noble Classics, 2004. Print.