Friday, May 31, 2019

The Self-destructive Relationship in Wuthering Heights Essay -- Wuther

On the face of it, it would seem that the relationship between Catherine and Heathcliff is self-destructive to an extreme. Due to the lovers precarious circumstances, passionate personalities and class divisions, it seems that fate transpires to asseverate them apart and therefore the hopelessness of their situation drives them to self desolation. However, although the relationship is undeniably self-destructive, there are elements within it that suggest the pain Heathcliff and Catherine put each another(prenominal) through is atoned for to an extent when they share their brief moments of harmony.Catherine is trapped between her love of Heathcliff and her love for Edgar, setting the two men down a path of destruction, a whirlwind of anger and resentment that Catherine gets caught in the middle of. Catherine is drawn to Heathcliff because of his fiery personality, their raw attraction and one certainly gets the sense that they are drawn together on a deeper level, that perhaps they are soulmates. C. Day Lewis thought so, when he declared that Heathcliff and Catherine represent the essential isolation of the soul...two halves of a single soulforever sundered and assay to unite. This certainly seems to be backed up in the novel when Catherine exclaims Nelly, I am Heathcliff Hes always, always in my mind--not as a pleasure, any more than I am always a pleasure to myself, but as my own being... This shows clearly the struggle Catherine feels as she is drawn spiritually to Heathcliff, but also to Edgar for genuinely different reasons. Edgar attracts Catherine predominantly because he is of the right social class. Catherine finds him handsome, and pleasant to be with, but her feelings for him seem petty when compared to the ones she harbours... ...ctive. Catherine is pushed to death and Heathcliff to brutal revenge, bordering on the psychotic. Yet onward Cathys death, the knowledge that the other loves them is strong enough to make Wuthering Heights such a cla ssic love story, and that old man by the kitchen flame affirming he has seen two of em looking out of his chamber window, on every rainy night since his death, shows that as they walk together on the moors, their self destruction may have led them to death, but also to what they most desired-being together. Works Cited - MLA FormatBronte, Emily. Wuthering Heights. London Dover Publications, 1996.Chatterjee, Praving. Emily Bronte. September 28, 2013. sack up 22 Apr. 2015.https//emilybronteparminder.wordpress.com/2013/09/28/brontes-contributions/ Wikipedia. Emily Bronte. Web 22 Apr. 2015. http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_Bront%C3%AB

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