Wuthering Heights was
originally published in 1847 under Emily Bronte's
pseudonym, Ellis Bell. Emily and her sisters, Charlotte and Anne, all
wrote under these gender-ambiguous pseudonyms because they weren't sure how
novels would be received if they were perceived to be written by women. This
might seem kind of lame, but if you think about it, it still goes on today. Why
does Joanne Rowling go by J.K. Rowling? It's because her publishers thought
that young boys wouldn't read a book that was written by a woman. So this is
still going on, although it was obviously much more of a big deal back in the
1850s when people thought that women couldn't do anything.
Wuthering Heights -
that was how it got its start. It was like, who is this Ellis Bell? Turns out
it's a woman - psych! It's a classic now. We don't care that it's written by a
woman. But when it was first published, people thought it was actually dark and
had way too much cruel stuff going on in it. It takes its name from an estate
where the story takes place, and because it takes place at a house that is
named something, it's probably set in England - that is a good tip-off.
It starts with a man named Lockwood who
was renting a house called Thrushcross Grange. That's another one of those
named houses. He's renting it from a man named Heathcliff, who lives in a
nearby home called - wait for it - Wuthering Heights.
Lockwood finds the residents of Wuthering
Heights to be kind of strange people, and he can't really figure out how they
all relate to each other. He's curious about it. He asks his housekeeper, whose
name is Nelly, to tell him the story about what happened to all those
people who live in that house. The rest of the story is sometimes told from
Lockwood's point of view and sometimes from Nelly's. Not everything is
perfectly chronological. It's a frame
narrative - a story within a story. But we're going to go
through it chronologically because that will make it make a lot more sense. It
is difficult enough to understand it anyway without going all out-of-order.
Nelly starts out by telling him about the
Earnshaw family, who she used to work for when they lived in Wuthering Heights
30 years ago. The Earnshaws had two children, whose names were Hindley and Catherine.
While Mr. Earnshaw was traveling on business, he ended up adopting a homeless
boy who he ran into. It's like when homeless people ask you for money and
you're supposed to give them food. Apparently, this guy decided to give him a
home. He named him Heathcliff - probably not after the fat, orange
cat (although that was a great movie that I watched when I was little).
Hindley is so jealous of Heathcliff, who is now
his sort-of new, adopted brother, because he gets way more attention from his
father and from his sister. He's raised like a member of the family, although
his attachment to Catherine seems a little more than brotherly, if you know
what I mean. It's kind of like how Woody Allen fell in love with the daughter
of his ex-girlfriend. It's not his biological daughter, but it's still kind of
family. It's still kind of creepy. It's like that situation.
Eventually, Hindley goes off to university and
doesn't return for three more years, until after he's married and his father,
Mr. Earnshaw, is dead. Once he's back, he demotes Heathcliff from adopted
brother to poorly-treated help. Here's where stuff gets weird.
One day, Heathcliff and Catherine head over to
Thrushcross Grange (where Lockwood is living now, but he wasn't living at that
time). They're hoping they're going to mess around with the snobby Linton
children who live there. They don't really like them. Catherine ends up getting
bitten by a dog and has to stay with the Linton family for about a month while
she's getting better. To a modern reader that probably does not make any sense
at all, but it seems to be something that people did back in the 18th and 19th
century, at least in literature. Apparently, if you get sick at someone's
house, you have to stay there for a while. It happens to Jane Bennet in Pride
and Prejudice.
While she's there for five weeks, she spends
some time with the Lintons.
She not only becomes as snobby as they are, but
she also falls for Edgar Linton, even though she isn't totally over
Heathcliff either. She gets engaged to Edgar, even though she realizes she
loved Heathcliff a bit more. She wants to marry someone of higher social status
and with more education. Heathcliff can't take this, and he runs away for three
years, which, I guess, is the amount of time that people run away for in this
book.
Heathcliff's Revenge
When he comes back, he's acquired some
mysterious wealth, and he's decided he's going to use this to exact revenge on
everybody who has wronged him, as is the tradition with newly wealthy,
vigilante-type people. Hindley has become a sad-sack drunk in the meantime. His
wife died giving birth to their son, Hareton (all these names - I
know it's hard to keep track of, and I'm sorry). Heathcliff views this as an
opportunity, and he loans Hindley a lot of money. Hindley is his old adopted
brother who eventually demoted him to servant. So, when Hindley dies,
Heathcliff ends up inheriting Wuthering Heights as debt repayment. It's a way
to get back at Hindley.
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