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Chapters XXVII–XXX
Summary: Chapter XXVII
During the next week, Edgar’s health grows consistently
worse. Worried for her father, young Catherine only reluctantly
rides to her meeting with Linton on the moors. Nelly comes with
her. The cousins talk, and Linton seems even more nervous than usual.
He reveals that his father is forcing him to court Catherine, and
that he is terrified of what Heathcliff will do if Catherine rejects
him. Heathcliff arrives on the scene and questions Nelly about Edgar’s
health. He says that he worries that Linton will die before Edgar.
Heathcliff asks Catherine and Nelly to walk back to Wuthering Heights,
and, though Catherine reminds him that she is forbidden to do so
by her father, she agrees because she is afraid of Heathcliff. Heathcliff seems
full of rage toward Linton, who is practically weeping with terror.
Once he has Nelly and Catherine inside Wuthering Heights, Heathcliff
locks them inside the house and refuses to allow them to leave until
Catherine has married Linton. He allows Catherine to leave the bedroom
in which they are locked, but he keeps Nelly imprisoned there for
five days. During this time, the only soul Nelly sees is Hareton,
who is ordered to guard and attend her. Summary: Chapter XXVIII
At last, the housekeeper, Zillah, frees Nelly from her
imprisonment, telling her that the villagers in Gimmerton have spread
the news that both Nelly and Catherine have been lost in Blackhorse
Marsh. Nelly searches through the house until she finds Linton,
who tells her that Catherine is locked away in another room. The
two are now husband and wife. Linton gloats over this development,
claiming that all of Catherine’s possessions are now his, as Edgar
is dying quickly. Fearing discovery by Heathcliff, Nelly hurries
back to Thrushcross Grange. Here, she tells the dying Edgar that
Catherine is safe and will soon be home. She sends a group of men
to Wuthering Heights to retrieve Catherine, but they fail in their
task. Edgar plans to change his will, placing Catherine’s inheritance
in the hands of trustees and thus keeping it from Heathcliff. He
summons Mr. Green, his lawyer, to the Grange. Nelly hears someone
arriving and believes it to be Mr. Green, but it is Catherine. Thus
Edgar sees his daughter once more before he dies, believing that
his daughter is happily married to Linton, and knowing nothing about
her desperate circumstances. Shortly after Edgar’s death, Mr. Green
arrives, and dismisses all of the servants except Nelly. He tries
to have Edgar buried in the chapel, but Nelly insists that he obey
Edgar’s will, which states that he wishes to be buried in the churchyard
next to his wife. Summary: Chapter XXIX
“. . . I got the sexton, who was digging Linton’s grave, to remove the earth off her coffin lid, and I opened it. . . .” Heathcliff appears at Thrushcross Grange shortly after
the funeral in order to take young Catherine to her new home. He
tells her that he has punished Linton for having helped her escape,
and says that she will have to work for her keep at Wuthering Heights.
Catherine angrily retorts that she and Linton are in fact in love,
despite Linton’s bad-temperedness, while Heathcliff has no one to
love him. Thus no matter how miserable Heathcliff makes the young
couple, Catherine says, they shall have the revenge of knowing that
his cruelty arises from his greater misery.
As Catherine is packing her things, Nelly asks Heathcliff
for Zillah’s position at Wuthering Heights, desperate to remain
with Catherine. But Heathcliff interrupts Nelly to tell her his
astonishing deed of the day before. While the sexton was digging
Edgar’s grave, Heathcliff had him remove the earth from his beloved
Catherine’s, and he opened her coffin to gaze upon her face, which
he says is still recognizable. Heathcliff asserts that Catherine
will not crumble to dust until he joins her in the ground, at which
point they will share the transformation together. He says that
he forced the sexton to remove one whole side of her coffin—the
side not facing Edgar—and that when he dies, he will require in
his will that the corresponding side of his coffin be removed, so
that he and Catherine might mingle in the earth. Nelly chastises
him for disturbing the dead, and Heathcliff tells her that Catherine’s
ghost has tormented him every night for the last eighteen years.
He explains that he has felt her presence without being able to
reach her. As they leave, Catherine asks Nelly to visit her soon,
but Heathcliff tells Nelly that she must never call at Wuthering
Heights, noting that if he wishes to see her he will come to Thrushcross
Grange. Summary: Chapter XXX
Nelly has not seen Catherine since she left, and her only
source of information about her is Zillah. Zillah says that Heathcliff
refused to allow anyone at Wuthering Heights to be kind or helpful
to Catherine after her arrival, and that Catherine tended to Linton
by herself until the day he died. Since Linton’s death, Catherine
has remained aloof from Zillah and from Hareton, with whom she has been
in constant conflict. Desperate to help her, Nelly tells Lockwood
that she has taken a cottage herself and wants to bring Catherine
to live with her, but she knows that Heathcliff will not allow it. The
only thing that could save Catherine would be another marriage,
says Nelly, but she does not have the power to bring about such
a thing.
Writing in his diary—where all of Nelly’s story has been recorded—Lockwood
says that this is the end of Nelly’s story, and that he is finally
recovering from his illness. He writes that he plans to ride out
to Wuthering Heights and to inform Heathcliff that he will spend
the next six months in London, and that Heathcliff may look for
another tenant for the Grange. He emphatically states that he has
no desire to spend another winter in this strange company. Analysis: Chapters XVII–XXX
As Edgar Linton grows weak and dies, Heathcliff’s cruelty
rages unchecked. Without fear of repercussion, he abuses the other
characters mercilessly, kidnapping Nelly and young Catherine. With
no one left who is strong enough to counter Heathcliff, the course
of events in these chapters seems inevitable. Heathcliff easily
succeeds in marrying his son to young Catherine, and in inheriting
Thrushcross Grange. However, a new force begins to rise up against
the tyrant. Catherine shows a defiant spirit, and she triumphantly declares
that the love between her and Linton will save them from misery
and make them superior to Heathcliff. This foreshadows her eventual
strong-willed rebellion against Heathcliff—and her redemption of
her oppressed predecessors through her love for her other cousin,
Hareton Earnshaw.
The young Catherine’s manifestation of her mother’s boldness, as
well as Heathcliff’s progressing revenge, bring to mind the older Catherine
and the defiant marriage to Edgar with which she first sparked Heathcliff’s
wrath. Indeed, perhaps because of young Catherine’s behavior, Heathcliff
himself seems to become increasingly preoccupied with thoughts of
the late Catherine. The horrifying spectacle of Heathcliff uncovering
her grave and gazing upon her corpse’s face, as well as his intense
concern about the fate of Catherine’s body, testifies to the extreme
depth of his obsession. In a sense, Heathcliff’s interest in the
decomposition of his beloved is quite in keeping with the nature
of their relationship. The text consistently describes their love
not only in spiritual terms, but in material ones. Thus Catherine
declares in Chapter IX, “Whatever souls are made of, his and mine
are the same.” Moreover, the relationship between Heathcliff and
Catherine has come to be associated with the soil where it has been
conducted; its fate becomes intertwined with that of the earth,
as the narrative repeatedly links both Heathcliff and Catherine
to the severe and wild moors, which frequently symbolize the unruly
nature of their love.
These chapters give us insight not only into the story’s
main characters and their relationships, but also into the story’s
narrator, Nelly Dean. First, Nelly chooses to lie to Edgar about
his daughter’s condition as Edgar lingers near death, a well-meaning
untruth that resembles her earlier lie to Linton, which she told
en route to deliver him to Heathcliff. Just as she declared to Linton
that his father was kind and generous, she now tells Edgar that
his daughter is happily married. Nelly thus shows herself willing
to lie and distort the truth in order to spare feelings and ease
social situations. Nelly again displays a certain manipulative quality
in a statement she makes outside the story, to Lockwood. She tells
him that the young Catherine’s last hope for salvation would be
a second marriage, but that she, Nelly, is powerless to bring about
such a union. This remark seems intended to express more than idle
wishfulness. As the reader may recall, Nelly insinuates in Chapter
XXV that Lockwood might fall in love with Catherine himself. At
the time, the comment seemed nothing more than speculation. Yet
now the reader can see that Nelly may be pursuing a plot to rescue
her former mistress.
Indeed, Nelly’s willingness to narrate the story to Lockwood
in the first place may stem from this notion of saving Catherine.
Nelly paints a far more flattering picture of young Catherine than
she does of the girl’s mother, even when they exhibit similar traits.
Nelly frequently emphasizes young Catherine’s beauty, and she may
subtly frame her story in a certain way so as to pique Lockwood’s
interest in the girl. Of course, this is merely one possible interpretation
of the text, but again, it is extremely important to consider the
motivations and biases of the character who narrates the story.
One of the most impressive aspects of Emily Brontë’s achievement
in Wuthering Heights is her ability to include
such finely drawn, subtle psychological portraits as that of Nelly
Dean—many of whose most fascinating human qualities emerge only
when one reads between the lines of her narration. |
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