Monday, August 19, 2019
Remoteness and Loneliness in Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte Essay
Remoteness and Loneliness in Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte      Emily Bronte loved nature and spent most of her childhood on the  remote Yorkshire Moors near her home in Haworth. Emily found that the  Moors were a place of peace and sanctuary where she could retreat to  relax and follow one of her most favourite past times, which was  writing. However she knew that in a matter of seconds the Moors could  change into a wild and savage wilderness.    Emily chose this ever-changing setting for her only novel "Wuthering  Heights". "Wuthering Heights" tells the tale of two families living in  and around the bleak Yorkshire Moors near a small village, very  similar to Haworth, called Gimmerton. This setting mirrors the  personalities of the savage and brutal characters. These characters  live in a remote and weather ravaged working farmhouse called  Wuthering Heights. Wuthering Heights acquired it's name due to the,    "atmospheric tumult to which its station is exposed in stormy weather"    The inhabitants of Wuthering Heights need to be tough to survive and  only those characters born in Wuthering Heights are able to survive  within it. When Hindley returns from University with his wife Frances  she dies rather quickly as she cannot survive the savage weather  conditions. We do not expect Hindley to die but as he has been away  from Wuthering Heights for so long he also cannot survive. However  there are other reasons for his death. When Heathcliff returns from  his absence he stays with Hindley, and gets his long awaited revenge  by slowly luring Hindley into gambling and alcoholism. This is the  main cause of his death. If Wuthering Heights was not set in such an  isolated place Heathcliff would not have been able to torture and...              ...alanced and would not have been as successful with  Victorian audiences. Imagery using nature was not seen or heard of  very much in large industrial cities such as London or Liverpool so a  novel set in the remote Yorkshire Moors was inevitably going to be  interesting for the inhabitants of the city to read. "Wuthering  Heights" would be neither realistic nor interesting and would not have  the excitement that it is famous for without itââ¬Ës setting. It would  become boring and average and would not have made such an impact with  its new ideas and scandals such as Catherine falling in love with her  adoptive brother Heathcliff. However perhaps with a less savage and  remote setting the characters would have been happier and most  importantly the tragic yet futile love of Catherine and Heathcliff  could have continued not only in their deaths but also in their lives.                        
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