What Does A Vegetarian Christmas Lunch...
Christmas0 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You're essentially right.Haven't seen the musical so can't comment on that at all but as to the book, I believe Heathcliff to very misunderstood and a victim of Georgian society and it's predeliction with social status.There are interesting semi-incestuous overtones to their love since they had been reared as siblings since quite a young age and their passion for one another goes far more deeply than simply lust or infatuation, it's more like the angst felt when a twin dies rather than merely a lover.Heathcliff's anger and pain are evident in the way in which he treats Cathy's daughter once she comes to live with him, he loves her as part of Cathy and hates her since she is not his child but Edgar Lintons. He has no such merciful thoughts about his own son who is merely his instrument and whom he views as almost less than nothing implying an unserlying insecurity and self loathing in that his own blood is clearly worthless ( perhaps harking back to the words Cathy spoke which prompted him to leave about Heathcliff being beneath her). I think their entire relationship was unhealthy in it's intensity and wondered myself if they had not been the victims of the Georgian class system and married what their story would have been, absive to the core I would imagine.It's an interesting take on early feminine domination too as Cathy is clearly the dominant one of the two in their relationship, which given the time it was written is interesting.
I haven't seen the musical, didn't really fancy it, is it any good?
Yes well you are absolutely right, social position was everything and certainly governed the behaviour of both of them to some degree.wuthering Heights is one of my favourite pieces of literature ( my dearest heart's wish was that Charlotte Bronte had not destroyed Emily's second novel after her death as in my opinion Emily Bronte was a remarkable author).
The whole book is charged with emotion from beginning to end and imho almost more interesting than the Cathy/Heathcliff saga is the relationship between Heathcliff, Hindley and Hindley's son Hareton.
Heathcliff returned and made it his life's work to destroy Hindley and place him in the same base situation that Hindley had inflicted upon him yet after Hindley's death, although he kept Hareton uneducated, he fostered a strange sort of affection for the boy as though he saw something of himself in his position and it is clear that he did him no serious harm, in fact making sure that the Heights were returned to him after his death. I always felt that that was Heathcliff at his most human and I have always thought that it was his attempt to make things right as they should be indicating that he thought and felt very deeply about the wrongs he inflicted on people.
It's an interesting, and hotly debated, idea that Heathcliff was modelled after Emily's brother Bramwell.
I hope you enjoy your book, I collect books and my wife bought me a very early copy of Wuthering Heights which i never fail to enjoy reading:)
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