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Cruelty In Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights

Decent Essays

"The reader is shocked, disgusted, almost sickened by details of cruelty, inhumanity, and the most diabolical hate and vengeance," spitefully declares Clifton Snider, a renowned literary critic, regarding the novel Wuthering Heights. Yet, the raw emotion and the ruthlessly explicit details present in this cruel story induces its audience to continue reading. The perverse and brutal behaviors depicted by the characters were subjects repressed from being acknowledged in Victorian society, leading to an increase in the purchase of the book, because it represents the uncivilized free and wild thinking that intrigued curious people in the 19th century and that continues to intrigue people in the present. Therefore, through Brontë’s unconventional …show more content…

Earnshaw and raised as his own son. There, he endures daily torment from his step-brother Hareton who abhors Heathcliff and regards him “as a usurper of his parent's affections and his privileges” (Brontë 37). The display of cruelty, ranging between stinging pinches to violent beatings, between such young children appalled readers. Moreover, after Mr. Earnshaw’s death when Hindley became the head of the manor, he further ill-treats his brother by relegating him to the position of a mere servant and by forcing him labor extensively. Retorting to the mistreatment he faces, Heathcliff vows to “pay Hindley back” (Brontë 54). Hence, Hindley initiates a cycle of maltreatment that influences Heathcliff’s future treatment of others. The author opts to include detailed accounts of violence between the young boys, invoking readers to label her as vile for creating the gruesome story while they ironically remain reading the “repelling” novel. As the book progresses, Heathcliff becomes the main perpetrator of hostility, as a result of the vicious rotation of abuse. First, he deceptively marries an innocent girl, Isabelle Linton, to exact revenge upon her brother, and he impairs both her mind and body. He, even, murders her precious dog, seeking to wound her. Heathcliff’s willingness to kill demonstrates his borderline sadistic inclination to receive pleasure from inflicting pain on others. His

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