So – “Wuthering Heights” by Emily Bronte is what
I chose for the next category of the book reading challenge - 19th Century
Fiction! It was on my to-read list for quite some time & is also considered
one of the best classics of English literature! An important aspect that
increased my interest in the book was a Zero rating in one of the reviews posted by a fellow blogger! Led by the curiosity of difference in
the way a top English literary classic was rated by a fellow blogger, and the
announcement of book reading challenge on the same day, I JUST couldn’t resist
choosing it for this category!
Wuthering Heights is about a passionate, yet a
very very tragic love saga between the two significant characters Heathcliff and
Catherine. They share a love so supreme, yet which makes life so miserable (for
them and for others involved), that they can only find peace together after
death! Heathcliff is found as an orphan by Catherine’s father & thus
brought into the household; He is treated as THE favorite, by her father
compared to the 2 children of his own. Though, Catherine is more accepting of
this fact after initial hesitation and becomes gradually friendly with
Heathcliff, it’s not the same for Hindley, her brother & this in itself,
forms the basis for the first flicker of the hatred that would last for the
coming generation as well!
There are few excerpts that will probably remain
etched forever in my thoughts!
Catherine’s justification of accepting another
proposal (that of Edgar’s whom she marries), when in actual, she truly loves
Heathcliff!
“It would
degrade me to marry Heathcliff now; so he shall never know how I love him; and
that, not because he’s handsome, Nelly, but because he’s more myself than I am.
Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same, and [Edgar’s] is as
different as a moonbeam from lightning, or frost from fire.”
Only the first liner of the justification is
heard by Heathcliff where she mentions about “degradation” & he
heartbroken, leaves Wuthering Heights only to return later, as a much more
bitter, manipulative & vengeful person (well, than he already was) !
You would want to hate Heathcliff for his
brutality, but then you cannot, because the extent of Heathcliff’s love is very
much soul stirring when he tries to explain his action of excavating Catherine’s
grave!!
“That, however,
which you may suppose the most potent to arrest my imagination is actually the
least, for what is not connected with her to me? And what does not recall her? I
cannot look down to this floor, but her features are shaped on the flags! In
every cloud, in every tree—filling the air at night, and caught by glimpses in
every object by day, I am surrounded with her image! The most ordinary faces of
men and women—my own features—mock me with a resemblance. The entire world is a
dreadful collection of memoranda that she did exist, and that I have lost
her!”
It’s quite disturbing that this same person who
can love so very supremely has not an iota of guilt or pricking conscience when
it comes to destroying someone else’s love by constant manipulations (which he
does when his own child from a different marriage falls in love with his beloved
Catherine’s child from her marriage to Edgar)!
I am not going to get into further details on the
book or introduce you to any more characters in the book as I can’t do it
without explaining the entire plot, and I don’t intend to do so for the simple
reason that though I found the book very gloomy & depressing, it still is an
excellent piece of commendable imagination by an author who hardly ever was
exposed to the outside world for most part of her life!! The way in which few
intrinsic thoughts of the significant characters are put across, is really
strong & definitely praiseworthy.
Having read most of the books by Jane Austen,
which are almost from the same era, this book came across to be very startlingly
different & at the same time, I must agree, interesting enough to not stop,
but go on reading till the end! Personally, I felt very much drained by the
time I completed the book and this is something I have never felt with any book
(believe me, I have read my share of not-so-happily-ever-after endings)… I also
had mixed feelings about each character as I couldn’t relate to anyone & I
couldn’t feel entirely happy, sad or bad for anyone! I just had this one
constant lingering thought for some time, that if Catherine’s father had not
gotten Heathcliff to his home, all the pain & suffering for generations to
come, could have been avoided!!
For those of you who are looking for a fairy tale
saga and a seemingly hopeful plot with a happily-ever-after ending – this book
is definitely not meant for you! However, if you are one of those, who do not
mind a different kind of a read (just once in a blue moon) and you have the
perseverance to stick to reading a massive masterpiece, through to the end, even
if it’s not what you had expected in the beginning, then, yes, you can give this
a try. To be true to the book, there is a happy ending after all, but the
portrayal of the extreme emotions of possessive love, the individual sufferings
due to that extreme passion, the hatred & revenge that it gives birth to,
the hostility that it inflicts on self and others throughout the course of the
book is so upsetting & saddening, that the happily ever after ending just
doesn’t seem to matter anymore at the end..
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