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How Is Catherine Presented In Wuthering Heights

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How Is Catherine Presented In Wuthering Heights
In Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights, the romance between Heathcliff and Catherine drives the story and causes untold pain and suffering for everyone in the story. Heathcliff’s motivations as a character are often unclear and left up for interpretation, especially after his beloved Catherine’s death. Towards the end of the novel there is a scene that is used to great success to showcase Heathcliff’s mental state before his death. However, it does much more than that. Through closely examining Bronte’s word choice and the images she invokes when Heathcliff is talking about Catherine’s corpse, we can decipher what has been driving Heathcliff throughout the whole of the novel. For context, this scene takes place after Heathcliff has been eating …show more content…
Her work here is not in what is said, but what is implied between the lines. When Heathcliff describes unearthing her coffin “…when I saw her face again—it is hers yet—he had hard work to stir me; but he said it would change, if the air blew on it” (288). In this one line Bronte gives us the entire visual story of the scene. The image she paints of Catherine’s decomposing corpse is truly unsettling without being gory or overly vulgar. She uses punctuation to paint a perfect picture of Heathcliff’s grieved reaction to seeing his beloved again after so long without drawing attention to it. Heathcliff continues to say “…I struck one side of the coffin loose…and I bribed the sexton to pull it away, when I’m laid there, and slide mine out too. I’ll have it made so, and then, by the time Linton gets to us, he’ll not know which is which” (288). Here we are given a few lines that show just how extreme Heathcliff’s love is. He wants everything of Catherine’s, to the point where becoming one with her body. The imagery is powerfully symbolic, conjuring up the image of their bodies decomposing, becoming one with the dirt around them and finally mixing together. Their physical selves finally able to be one just like their souls. These lines also give an impressive image of Heathcliff’s rivalry with Edgar for Catherine’s heart. The idea of Heathcliff wanting to become one with Catherine …show more content…
When he says, “I saw her face again” rather than saying “I saw her again” Bronte is giving us insight into just how fruitless his endeavors have been thus far (288). Since Catherine’s death Heathcliff has made it his mission to claim everything related to her, from Wuthering Heights to Thrushcross Grange, even arranging for his son Linton to marry her daughter. He has worked hard to obtain all of this, and yet it has left him feeling hallow. He has surrounded himself with reminders of his beloved, but he still does not feel her presence. He begins to have a crisis shortly after Linton and the second Catherine’s marriage, stops eating, and is driven to dig up Catherine’s grave. However, even after unearthing her corpse, he is still not satisfied. “I thought…I would have stayed there, when I saw her face again—it is hers yet…” (288.) From this we can gather that as he gazes at her decomposing corpse, he doesn’t see the woman he loved, just her body. This comes as a surprise to him, as can be implied from the moment of pause in his dialogue. It seems he thought in doing this he would clear his mind, to put all he’s done in perspective. It does being him peace, but perhaps not in the way he thought. As he looks at her body he realizes that the body in the ground is just another thing of hers, another reminder, not the real woman. Just as Catherine

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