Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Comparisons Quotes
- Wuthering Heights vs.
Thrushcross Grange
- "he bred bad feeling in the house"
Anmerkungen:
- WUTHERING HEIGHTS
- "completely removed
from the stir of society"
Anmerkungen:
- Wuthering Heights is free of societal conventions. It is a no man's land, no rules and no normality. It's wild.
- "a perfect
misanthropist's
heaven"
- "the atmospheric tumult to
which its station is exposed in
stormy weather"
Anmerkungen:
- Everyone in the house is raised to endure storms and fits of passion unlike at Thrushcross, where they succumb to it. Cathy is mad at Wuthering Heights but her illness is a cold, not her madness.
- "I observed no signs of roasting, boiling or
baking...nor any glitter of copper saucepans"
Anmerkungen:
- It's no home. There's no comfort, no sense of unity like at Thrushcross. Everyone is "eternally divided" even inside of the house.
- "as if we
lived in an
ancient
castle"
Anmerkungen:
- "seated in worse
than solitude"
- "We don't generally take to
foreigners here...unless they
take to us first"
Anmerkungen:
- Thrushcross have the opposite manner. They embrace strangers, Cathy, before she took to them, not that she ever did.
- "How did you contrive to
preserve the common
sympathies of human
nature when you resided
here?"
Anmerkungen:
- Again, removed from societal conventions.
- "Handily
became
tyrannical"
- "he lets her grow up
in absolute
heathenism"
Anmerkungen:
- Everyone who grows up at Wuthering Heights becomes some sort of villain. Is it nature or nurture? In Cathy's case it seems to be nature.
- "though everybody
despised and hated
each other"
Anmerkungen:
- Everybody at Wuthering Heights hates each other, it's common for the house to be in discord. But at Thrushcross, no such things happen. The Height's is wild and unharmonious. Thrushcross is the opposite.
- THRUSHCROSS GRANGE
- "Just go and see whether the Lintons
passed their Sunday evenings standing
shivering in corners, while their father
and mother sat eating and drinking,
and singing and laughing, and burning
their eyes out before the fire. Do you
think they do?"
Anmerkungen:
- The contrast of a home. They are united and in a 'home', Wuthering Heights is a wild, empty, loveless place where the only two united are Cahty and Heathcliff who are constantly pulled apart.
- "We should have thought ourselves in heaven"
Anmerkungen:
- Cathy and Heatchliff grew up in a loveless home, save the love they had for each other. In a home like Thruscross, they would have been eternally grateful for the opportunity to be able to love openly. So it's understandable why Cathy does pick Edgar, because she knows her and Heathcliff will be banished, forced to hide their love and eternally away from a home and therefore, a heaven. Later she says she would be miserable in heaven, because she realises she only needs Heathcliff to be happy.
- "It was not the thorn
bending to the
honeysuckles, but the
honeysuckles embracing
the thorn"
Anmerkungen:
- The Lintons embrace her but she, like Heathcliff to Mr Earnshaw's affection, is almost indifference. They are spoilt because at the Heights, embracing a thorn would not be considered. They would exclude that person.
- Heathcliff vs. Edgar
- "besides whom,
my master seemed
quite slender and
youth-like"
Anmerkungen:
- Heathcliff now betters Edgar in looks. "Foliage"
- "there will be
no saving him"
Anmerkungen:
- Edgar could not walk away from Cathy, nor make himself a man enough to match her. Heathcliff could. Heathcliff's love is stronger and more controlled/directed because of his strength against a Linton.
- "I know he
couldn't love
a Linton"
Anmerkungen:
- Cathy is a Linton to Edgar, but to Heathcliff, never.
- "You are one of those
things that are ever found
when least wanted"
Anmerkungen:
- Heathcliff, to the other occupants of Withering Heights was found and unwanted but not to Cathy. He is everything but. And so, when she says this to Edgar, it seems backwards because to everyone else the person she should be saying this to is Heathcliff. Also, to Cathy, Heathcliff is a treasure, a gem she found, but Edgar is no such thing when again it should be reversed.
- "He never struck
me as such a
marvellous
treasure"
- Cathy vs. Isabella
- "She was dwindling and
fading before our eyes"
Anmerkungen:
- A lot of what Isabella feels during her infatuation for Heathcliff is similar to what Cathy feels. Cathy's heart will always be at WH, not TG. Her fiery spirit, her "gunpowder" dwindles at TG without Heathcliff, her home or the moors. She too, could also have thought she was insane when she married Edgar, especially during her breakdown after their fight. Cathy could also be said to have married Edgar under delusion, unaware to how much her own soul needed Heathcliff and of course, how she would feel if and when he returned. She may have thought Edgar the more romantic choice.
- "My heart returned to
Thrushcross Grange in twenty
four hours after I left it"
- "I think the concentrated
essence of all the madness
in the world took up it's
abode in my brain the day
I linked my fate with
theirs"
- "She abandoned them
under a delusion...picturing
in me a hero of romance"
- "I wouldn't be you
for a kingdom,
then!"
Anmerkungen:
- Similar to the way Heathcliff wouldn't dream of being Edgar, Cathy wouldn't dream of being Isabella. Whilst the other has who each of them want, they wouldn't want each other on the same terms. Cathy and Heathcliff need each other on their own wild, independent and earned terms, and therefore, they wouldn't switch their misery but strong, free will for the Linton's 'stolen' happiness and softness. They would rather endure their own pain with what the Linton's don't have which is what makes the other attractive.
- "I'd as soon put that little
canary into the park on a
winter's day"
Anmerkungen:
- The contrast between Cathy and Isabella. Isabella is weak, a Linton, fragile, but Cathy, an Earnshaw, is strong, hardy and fiery so only she could survive Heathcliff.
- "He'll crush you like
a sparrow's egg"
- Cathy vs. Wuthering
Heights
- "they wouldn't let me
go to the end of the
garden wall"
Anmerkungen:
- Cathy's daughter, who is born and bred Thrushcross, is trapped at Wuthering Heights, much like Cathy was at Thrushcross. It seems you belong to only one of the homes and any interchangeability causes grief and heartache and a change in character which is ruining.
- "we are
eternally
divided"
Anmerkungen:
- The two are eternally divided and never unite, despite marriages, love and alliances. It's impossible to belong to both.
- "You could knock him
down in a twinkling"
Anmerkungen:
- Nelly says this to Heathcliff, however it's more true of Cathy. Like Lady Macbeth, Cathy's strength is not physical but emotional. She has an extreme power of Edgar which surpasses his love for her and is actually his desire to contain her which is impossible because she is the embodiment of the wildness of Wuthering Heights. All it takes is Cathy to put on a fit and Edgar is at her beck and call. In fact, Edgar's weakness is not his lack of weakness against Heathcliff but his love for Cathy and the power he lets that have over himself.
- "Mr. Edgar seldom
visit Wuthering
Heights openly"
Anmerkungen:
- This is ironic since he marries Cathy who is basically Wuthering Heights and therefore takes Wuthering Heights to Thrushcross Grange, expanding the reach of her storm and giving himself no option but to always be int he presence of Wuthering Heights.
- CATHY IS
WUTHERING HEIGHTS
- "It was a very dark
evening for
summer"
- "there was a violent wind, as well as
thunder, and either one or the other split a
tree off at the corner of the building, a
huge bough fell across the roof"
- "She beat..any child
at a good passionate
fit of crying"
- "She and her
husband both
took the fever"
- "The gunpowder lay as
harmless as sand"
Anmerkungen:
- Until Heathcliff, the
catalyst for the storm at
Wuthering Heights and Cathy,
returns and 'strikes the match' proving that Cathy is Wuthering Heights and Heathcliff the one who generates a storm, who sets her off.