Wuthering heights why does heathcliff marry isabella
Heathcliff is a hero because of the depth of his love for Catherine, and the great care he has for her. Heathcliff is a villain because of the merciless revenge he tries to get on the Lintons and Hindley. Later on Heathcliff acquires Wuthering Heights land and house from Hindley mostly by deceit and exploiting Hindley's weakness of gambling and alcohol addiction.
He then leases out the land to tenants and is as firm as a landlord can be in exacting his dues. Earnshaw dies, Hindley seeks to degrade Heathcliff by turning him into a manual laborer and depriving him of access to the "curate" tutor.
Later, Hindley concocts a social-climbing scheme to unite the Earnshaws and the Lintons by marrying Catherine off to Edgar. Heathcliff grows restless towards the very end of the novel and stops eating. Nelly Dean does not believe that he had the intention to commit suicide , but that his starvation may have been the cause of his death. He wanted to be with Cathy in eternal life. Later, Hindley dies, but Nelly states that it was the over consumption of alcohol that killed Hindley.
Heathcliff , again, is not entirely to blame for this death , but his constant abuse and need for revenge may have had something to do with Hindley's early death.
When Heathcliff left Thrushcross Grange, he hung Isabella's dog. This action is foreshadowing the poor treatment that Heathcliff will give Isabella while she stays with him.
Because Heathcliff kills the dog and because killing the dog is foreshadowing his violence towards Isabella , dogs a a symbol of violence. Heathcliff's severe pain for cathy his beloved made him to take revenge. He seeks revenge may be because he was bullied by Master Hindley while he was at the Heights and also maybe because he lost his love due to the fact the Hindlry degraded him in the household which made catherine choose Edgar Linton over him.
Isabella flees Wuthering Heights after Heathcliff's grief combined with Isabella and Hindley's taunting results in violence.
When Edgar ignores her pleas, she sends a letter to Nelly, describing her horrible experiences at Wuthering Heights. Isabella also tells Nelly that Hindley has developed a mad obsession with Heathcliff, who has assumed the position of power at Wuthering Heights. Isabella says that she has made a terrible mistake, and she begs Nelly to visit her at Wuthering Heights, where she and Heathcliff are now living. When Nelly arrives, Heathcliff presses her for news of Catherine and asks if he may come see her.
Nelly refuses to allow him to come to the Grange, however, and, enraged, Heathcliff threatens that he will hold Nelly a prisoner at Wuthering Heights and go alone.
Terrified by that possibility, Nelly agrees to carry a letter from Heathcliff to Catherine. Heathcliff, who seemed an almost superhuman figure even at his most oppressed, emerges in these chapters as a demonically charismatic, powerful, and villainous man, capable of extreme cruelties. Tortured by the depth of his love for Catherine, by his sense that she has betrayed him, and by his hatred of Hindley and the Linton family for making him seem unworthy of her, Heathcliff dedicates himself to an elaborate plan for revenge.
The execution of this plan occupies much of the rest of the novel. But though his destructive cruelty makes him the villain of the book, Heathcliff never loses his status as a sympathetic character. Although one can hardly condone his actions, it is difficult not to commiserate with him. In some sense, he fulfills both roles. The love between Catherine and Heathcliff constitutes the center of Wuthering Heights both thematically and emotionally, and, if one is to respond at all to the novel, it is difficult to resist sympathizing with that love.
Correspondingly, as a participant in this love story, Heathcliff never becomes an entirely inhuman or incomprehensible character to the reader, no matter how sadistically he behaves.
If this is true, then one might argue that the book, in creating such charismatic main characters as Heathcliff and Catherine, defeats its own purpose. Similarly, Heathcliff suffers the ill treatment of characters who seem his intellectual and spiritual inferiors; thus when he seeks revenge on a brute such as Hindley, the reader secretly wishes him success.
In addition to exploring the character of Heathcliff as a grown man, this section casts some light on the character of Nelly Dean as a narrator. It is important to remember that Nelly is not much older than Catherine and grew up serving her. She also notes that Hindley has made plans to kill Heathcliff and take his money. Isabella concludes that she has made a terrible mistake, and it is too late for her to fix it. She begs Nelly to come over to the Heights, who she barely got to see when she arrives.
After Catherine dies, Isabella is not invited to her sister-in-law's funeral. On the morning of the service, Hindley tries to be sober for the service, but ends up drinking heavily. While Heathcliff was away paying tribute to Catherine, Hindley locks him out of the house and reveals to Isabella he is going to kill him, and has even showed her the gun he would use to shoot him.
She was told by Hindley to help him kill her husband, but ends up warning Heathcliff about the plan when he comes back, though she doesn't let him into the house.
She watches as Hindley attempts to shoot Heathcliff, with her husband breaking through the window and the two men fight. She goes to fetch Joseph after Hindley was beaten up. The next morning, she tells Hindley what has happened since he doesn't remember, and when she taunts to Heathcliff about Catherine, he throws a knife at her that hits behind her ear.
After the men fight again, she flees the Heights and walks through the snow to the Grange. She was laughing hysterically when she arrives, and she came back home when she knew Edgar was asleep. Since her brother wouldn't let her stay, she still needs to see Nelly.
Nelly tends to her wounds while Isabella throws her wedding ring away in the fire. After explaining her whole story to Nelly, she leaves Yorkshire for good and settles in London. She was pregnant at the time, and months later, gave birth to a sickly boy named Linton Heathcliff. She raises her son alone. Both she and Linton lived in London for 12 years until Isabella's health fails. Before she died, she is visited by Edgar for the final time and brings her son back to Yorkshire after her death.
Isabella is a beautiful and fair young woman, whose beauty may had attracted Heathcliff to win her over but for his revenge. In addition, she starts off as innocent and pure, since she grew up in a lavish lifestyle without any knowledge of cruelty and abuse, as well as being spoiled with gifts and attention by her family.
She tells Nelly that they are living at Wuthering Heights and begs for a visit. The letter goes on to tell of her experiences at Wuthering Heights. Isabella encounters Hareton, Joseph, and Hindley: All are rude and uncaring.
She realizes her mistake but also knows that it is too late. She cannot even find a place to sleep that is her own. When Heathcliff returns, he tells her that Catherine is sick, that he blames Edgar, and that he plans on making her suffer in place of Edgar. Nearing death, Catherine knows the next time she goes to the moors will be her last.
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