As humans, it becomes effortless, perhaps almost innate, to become constructs of society. While humans are born Tabula Rasa, there are innocence and unknowns within that result in the individual to willingly adapt to the societal rules. In the canonical novel Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte uses Heathcliff who is pushed into a dysfunctional white home who do not offer and eliminate opportunity to become a functional and educated civilized man. Moreover, most characters in the novel produce him to become one of the most monstrous men in literary history. While his actions should not be fully redeemed or forgotten, there is reasonable justification to understand why society has made him be. It is also essential to realize that because …show more content…
Nelly paints her own subjective picture for the readers of what Mr. Earnshaw’s point of view was when he saw Heathcliff. At that moment, Mr. Earnshaw saw Heathcliff labeled as an orphan without opportunity or fortune. In contrast, Mr. Earnshaw has gone through his life with privilege so he thought that bringing Heathcliff home would make a future with promise; Mr. Earnshaw did not know of the unjust in his home that would affect Heathcliff. Given that Mr. Earnshaw provided Heathcliff a roof over his head, he also provided him a life with cruelty and degradation. Without Mr. Earnshaw’s false and naive perspective to take action, Heathcliff had a chance to remain a man of moral. Furthermore, Hindley actively seeks revenge on Heathcliff by revoking education and transforms him into a monstrous and relentless character. With Hindley’s constant torment, the reasons of Heathcliff’s ‘why’ for all of his actions and pursuits begin to appear. Hindley lives in a stage of fire burning rage with no water in sight for recover nor peace. The root of his revenge is based because his father no longer uses his attention Hindley to be a main focus. Mr. Earnshaw demanded that Heathcliff must be treated with respect because it made, “This endurance made old Earnshaw furious when he discovered his son [Hindley] persecuting the poor, fatherless child” (Bronte 38).
Through self-centered and narcissistic characters, Emily Bronte’s classic novel, “Wuthering Heights” illustrates a deliberate and poetic understanding of what greed is. Encouraged by love, fear, and revenge, Catherine Earnshaw, Heathcliff, and Linton Heathcliff all commit a sin called selfishness.
When Mr. Earnshaw brought Heathcliff to his house, he was treated badly by Hindley. When Mr. Earnshaw found him on the street
When Heathcliff returns three years later, his love for Catherine motivates him to enact revenge upon all those who separated him from her. Since he last saw Catherine, he has “fought through a bitter life”; he “struggled only for [her]” (Brontë 71). Nelly observes a “half-civilized ferocity” in Heathcliff’s brows (Brontë 70); she views him as “an evil beast…waiting his time to spring and destroy” (Brontë 79). Heathcliff’s obsessive love for Catherine becomes a menacing threat. Heathcliff reproaches Catherine because she “treated [him]
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte was published in 1847 and received many contradictory judgements. One main judgement that criticized the novel was how multiple characters can have a change in characterization depending on the reader. Many of the novel's characters, such as Heathcliff, possess positive values, but readers tend to focus on their negative qualities which allows these characters to change. Growing up poor and homeless, Heathcliff’s character changes many times throughout the novel as he grows older and possess negative qualities towards other characters. Later residing as an old, lonely master, Heathcliff’s change in character at the end of Wuthering Heights signifies that he has gone mad and leads to intentions that Heathcliff has not committed suicide, but lost all will after all he has been through.
Heathcliff is introduced in Nelly's narration as a seven-year-old Liverpool foundling (probably an Irish famine immigrant) brought back to Wuthering Heights by Mr. Earnshaw. His presence in Wuthering Heights overthrows the prevailing habits of the Earnshaw family, members of the family soon become involved in turmoil and fighting and family relationships become spiteful and hateful. Even on his first night, he is the reason Mr. Earnshaw breaks the toys he had bought for his children. "From the very beginning he bred bad feelings in the house". Heathcliff usurps the affections of Mr. Earnshaw to the exclusion of young Hindley-: "The young master had learnt to regard his father as an oppressor rather than a
Heathcliff is the main character of this novel, and the readers are taken on a story through his life, from a young boy to his death. Heathcliff was introduced into the novel as a homeless child adopted by the Earnshaw family. The Earnshaw family consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Earnshaw
In in the novel Weathering Heights by Emily Bronte, a child named Heathcliff is at first is an underprivileged, homeless boy, then he becomes a loved and abandoned, then he is a dishonored lover, and lastly, he changes into a malicious, isolated owner. When he is first introduced it states that “We crowded round, and over Miss Cathy's head I had a peep at a dirty, ragged, black-haired child; big enough both to walk and talk: indeed, its face looked older than Catherine's; yet when it was set on its feet, it only stared round, and repeated over and over again some gibberish that nobody could understand." .(EC __) This quote truly showcases just how poor Heathcliff was when he was brought by Mr. Earnshaw to Weathering Heights. After he is brought to Weathering Heights, Hindley, Mr. Earnshaw’s son starts to be very mean to Heathcliff since his father showcases how much he loves Healthcliff. After a period of time, he undergoes a loss of loss of community ranking when made to labour and his rejection by Catherine. After he is rejected by Catherine, he leaves Weathering Heights for an entire three years. When Heathcliff does return to Weathering Heights, he has changed into a complete gentleman, he starts another connection with Catherine, but begins to execute his plan of revenge. Hindley's started to give a really hard time to Heathcliff as soon as his dad passed away . In order to make him be in the lowest social position possible. Just by being in Weathering Heights, the family habits change and the family soon starts to be involved in fighting. For an example, on his first night, Heathcliff is the reason Mr. Earnshaw decides to break all of the toys he had brought for his children. Nelly describes how Heathcliff’s presence in the house was accepted as when he states "From the very beginning he bred bad feelings in the house". Heathcliff usurps the affections
Heathcliff most aptly suits as an example of how treachery and deceit are powerful tools for rising up above one’s class status. As a child Heathcliff receives an education on par with Catherine as old Earnshaw ensures that he studies as much as his daughter, but upon his passing Heathcliff no longer has a teacher to instruct him. At sixteen we see him struggle “to keep up an equality with Catherine in her studies” and eventually yields with a strong regret to give
As we begin to read Wuthering Heights, we immediately see how unrefined Heathcliff is; therefore, we begin to question what actions or circumstances brought him to this day, to these emotions. Heathcliff’s merit was smaller than even a grain of sand, his “family” didn’t respect him and the
Hindley takes revenge on Heathcliff because he felt his father liked Heathcliff more. Hindley does this by denying him education & separating him from Catherine.
The theme that will take the limelight in this paper will the concepts of injustice and justice, concentrating around the character of Heathcliff. This interesting individual is quite unique, coming into this tale, or reintroduced by Nelly as a young dark skinned lad from the streets. As soon as he comes to his new stay at Wuthering Heights, he is faced with a certain type of injustice from the blood son of Heathcliff’s adoptive father, Hindley. Taking a dislike to Heathcliff and treats him so. This is the first form of injustice, bringing him into a hard shell of sorts that makes him blunt against his adoptive sibling’s lashes at him. Here we see him slowly gather the emotions that will cause him to seek out justice against his abuser in a large mastermind plot against him and many others as time goes by, The term justice here is unique to Heathcliff,
As Heathcliff aged, his love for Catherine—first shown on the night of Mr. Earnshaws death when only the two of them can comfort each other—blossomed and bloomed not into the rose which would have been expected from such a strong, passionate love, but into the twisted thorn bush of Heathcliff’s dark revenge. After Mr. Earnshaws death Catherine’s elder brother, Hindley, became the new proprietor of Wuthering Heights. Under Hindley’s guiding hand, Heathcliff was sent out into the fields with the servants and was no longer aloud to be educated along with Catherine. This was the first time that the two of them were separated, and it later led to Heathcliff’s wreaking his revenge upon Hindley by first driving him to drink, taking his land with gambling debts, and corrupting his son Hareton in the same way that Hindley had done to Heathcliff, but to an exaggerated degree. The next “victim” of Heathcliff’s revenge was Edgar Linton.
Emily Brontë’s novel Wuthering Heights, set in the countryside of England’s 1700’s, features a character named Heathcliff, who is brought into the Earnshaw family as a young boy and quickly falls into a passionate, blinding romance with the Earnshaw’s daughter, Catherine. However, Heathcliff is soon crushed by this affection when his beloved chooses the company of another man rather than his own. For the remainder of the novel he exudes a harsh, aversive attitude that remains perduring until his demise that is induced by the loss of his soulmate, and in turn the bereavement of the person to whom the entirety of his being and his very own self were bound.
Furthermore, Heathcliff since he arrived to the Earnshaw's house, he be treated with not equality as Hindley or Catherine. Apparently nobody like him especially Hindley, since his father Mr. Earnshaw pay more attention to Heathcliff instead of his own son. They always remind him that he was not part of the Earnshaw family. There is a part of the novel that both parents die
Every person has a background story that makes them who they are today. In Emily Bronte’s novel, Wuthering Heights, she demonstrates how anger, hatred, and revenge all create enemies and eventually the character’s downfall. Being an outsider to the Earnshaw family from the very beginning, Heathcliff’s heritage and peculiar disappearance within the book shape his relationships throughout the novel why he might despise the residents of both estates.