Nelly was able to find out about Linton's well-being from Zillah, the housekeeper at Wuthering Heights. She learned that Linton was struggling with poor health and was often left to his own devices.
Nelly learned about Linton through the housekeeper at Wuthering Heighs
at wuthering heights A+
Nelly learned about Linton through the housekeeper at Wuthering Heighs
This is just one theory I once heard about the description of the windows at the heights being deep set with 'large jutting stones' being somehow similar in aspect to Heathcliff's apperance and character. This is just one theory I once heard about the description of the windows at the heights being deep set with 'large jutting stones' being somehow similar in aspect to Heathcliff's apperance and character.
The most obvious is the love/hate relationship between Catherine and Heathcliff. He is abusive towards her and yet at the same time loves her very much. Catherine never marries Heathcliff but in doing so leads a life of depression and eventual death. Heathcliff is referred to as a "devil" but only because his charm is so two-faced. One could also see that Wuthering Heights itself is a Love/Hate estate. While the manor is large and the landscape sublime, the house can also be seen as an analogy for Hell. Catherine is seen describing Heaven as a place she would be most unhappy but at Wurthering Heights she is at peace. She hates its dark gothic walls but could be happy no place else.
oh yeah i did write it, i dont remember doing it though but i did write it because it has the same password as my other stuff... It was 6th grade though and i was probably jealous haha
metaphor in Mrs. Dean's description of Heathcliff's face: chapter 7 second paragraph (according to the book I'm using) "Don't get the expression of a vicious cur that appears to know the kicks it gets are its desert, and yet hates all the world, as well as the kicker, for what it suffers" (45).
Rain Wind Fear of Heights No Ladder Birds
Heathcliff was undergoing a psychological conflict for Catharine's loss and to purge that loss he embraces Isabella and avenge the wrong doing which the credulous Isabella feels as Heathcliff's sincerity.
If one had a fear of heights, doing something totally out of character may include bungee jumping. People would be surprised by their decision to bungee jump because they are normally afraid of heights.
I don't see this as a romance, I never have. To me, Heathcliff and Cathy, both, are extremely unsympathetic characters who engage in the antithesis of romance. They are selfish, destructive, and just plain mean. The birds are reflection of this primary plot. They are not partners, they are adversaries that function out of spite. They resent one another even as they profess to love on another. This spite and resentment are what drive Heathcliff to kill the birds. If they had actually hooked up, then he'd certainly have been capable of doing the same to Cathy.
· Edgar Allan Poe (The Raven) · Edward Morgan (E.M.) Forester (A Passage to India) · Edward Gibbon (The Rise and Fall Of The Roman Empire) · Emily Bronte (Wuthering Heights) · Erich Maria Remarque (All Quiet on the Western Front) · Erma Bombech (If Life is a Bowl of Cherries, What Am I Doing in the Pits?) · Ernest Hemingway (A Farewell to Arms) · Thomas Sterns (T.S.) Eliot (numerous poems, plays & nonfiction publications) · Ralph Waldo Emerson (American poet and essayist)