Hindley is sent away to school
Mr. Earnshaw sends Hindley away to college to separate him from Heathcliff and the ongoing conflicts.
Hindley is sent away to school
Heathcliff was initially rejected and seen as an outsider by the Earnshaw family, except for Mr. Earnshaw's daughter, Catherine. Hindley, Mr. Earnshaw's son, particularly resented Heathcliff's presence and treated him poorly.
Yes, so mr earnshaw simply bring heathcliff home. It's always been that way and that's the way that it will odds are stay
Heathcliff's origins are mysterious; he is found as a homeless boy on the streets of Liverpool by Mr. Earnshaw during a business trip. Mr. Earnshaw brings Heathcliff back to Wuthering Heights and raises him as part of the family, alongside his own children, Catherine and Hindley.
Mr. and Mrs. Earnshaw are characters in the novel "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Brontë. They are the parents of Hindley and Catherine, and they adopt Heathcliff. Mr. Earnshaw's decision to bring Heathcliff into their family sets off a chain of events that drive much of the novel's plot.
Hindley Earnshaw & Francis (a girl he met while away at college) Catherine Earnshaw & Edgar Linton Heathcliff & Isabella Linton Linton Heathcliff (heathcliff & Isabella's son) & Catherine Linton (catherine & Edgar's daughter)*Linton dies soon after At the end Catherine & her cousin Hareton Earnshaw (son of Hindley & Francis) are engaged
Hareton Earnshaw was mistreated by Heathcliff, who raised him with neglect and cruelty after the death of his parents. Heathcliff deprived Hareton of education, proper upbringing, and treated him as a servant in his own home. This mistreatment resulted in Hareton growing up uneducated and ill-mannered, perpetuating the cycle of abuse that began with Heathcliff.
vindictively
Members of the Earnshaw family: Heathcliff (adopted) Mr Earnshaw Mrs Earnshaw Catherine Edgar House Maid: Nelly Dean Members of the Linton Family: Mr + Mrs Linton Isabella Edgar
Hindley did not like Heathcliff mainly because they are rivals. Hindley's father, Mr. Earnshaw, brought Heathcliff home as an orphan, and he loved this orphan more than his own flesh and blood son, Hindley. For this reason Hindley torments Heathcliff endlessly. Heathcliff uses this to his advantage when he forces Hindley to trade horses with him when his horse goes lame. He threatens to tell Mr. Earnshaw how much Hindley harms him if Hindley doesn't trade horses with him. Hope this answers your question.
At the beginning of Nellys story within the book Heathcliff is presumed an orphan because they don't know"to whom he belonged" but throughout the book people lose their parents: Catherine & Hindley Earnshaw, Isabella & Edgar Linton, Catherine Linton, Hareton Earnshaw and Linton Heathcliff
After Mr. Earnshaw's death, Heathcliff becomes resentful and isolated, while Cathy becomes withdrawn and grief-stricken. Their coping mechanisms differ, with Heathcliff turning to anger and revenge, and Cathy turning inward to process her emotions. Their responses to Mr. Earnshaw's death contribute to the complex dynamics in Emily Bronte's novel, "Wuthering Heights."