Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Emily Brontes Wuthering Heights Essay -- Emily Bronte Wuthering Heigh
Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights      1)  The story takes place in the early XIXth century. There are two  characters in this extract : Mr Lockwood and Catherine Linton. Mr  Lockwood is the first narrator of this novel, he was one of Mr  Heathcliff's tenants. At the beginning of the story , there were three  characters : Heathcliff, a foundling, his sister Catherine and his  brother Hindley. Catherine fell in love with Heathcliff, but was  married with Edgar Linton. So, the second character we meet here is  Catherine Linton, Edgar Linton's daughter. This extract belongs to the  end of the novel. Catherine comes back to the farm Wuthering Heights,  she tries to get in the house trough the window. Mr Lockwood, which  had read Catherine's diary, does not recognize her.    2)  In this text, Mr Lockwood is in his bed room at Wuthering Heights, he  is alone and he had to stay in the farm because of the snow. He is  disturbed by the gusty wind and the incessant move of the fir-bough.  So he tries to stop this teasing noise, opening the window and seizing  the branch. When his fingers grabbed the branch, another cold hand  caught his. Then the context makes the text become an ambiguous  experience and we can say that this extract is set between sanity and  madness to some extents.    First of all, we will see that this text relates an ambiguous  experience. The atmosphere is gloomy : Mr Lockwood is alone in an  isolated farm, everithing is dark around him and there are many  teasing noises. So we can say that the atmosphere is quite  nightmarish. Mr Lockwood had found Catherine Linton's diary, and he  had read it. So he knows the passion between Catherine Linton and Mr  Heathcliff, the owner of Wuthering Heights. The first contact between...              ...ieve that what he is living is a hallucination, a  product of his imagination because nothing seems to be real. Maybe  that the excessive feelings mentionned are caused by Mr Lockwood's  imagination ; for the reader, the atmosphere is not very threatening.  As in many pre-Romantic novel, the nightmarish atmosphere, symbolised  by the darkness, the moor, the winter, is the source of imagination  and also of fear : imagination and extreme feelings like fear are  linked together.    We could make a link between this novel from Emily Bront and the  short stories by Edgar Allan Poe, like in The Raven for example.  Indeed, Poe wrote his short stories in the same period as Emily  Bront. In The Raven, the power of imagination, the supranatural and  the unreal have also a great place, and we could note, as in Wuthering  Heights, that the feelings expressed are often excessive.                      
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