Tuesday, May 19, 2020
`` Wuthering Heights `` By Emily Bronte - 2038 Words
Romantic philosophers proposed that every person or entity had its own individual universe that only the person or entity itself could observe. This Romantic self was desperate to connect to others and yearned for love, a mutual connection between two understanding parties that could allow the lonely self to access a universe outside of its own. If the longing to love and connect with this other person was a legitimate desire from the personââ¬â¢s true energy, then Romantic philosopher William Blake would say that it was pure and correct and must be followed. Tragically, many people fail to understand their energies and chase after what they think they want but what will bring no real joy to them. To truly love and connect to another, one mustâ⬠¦show more contentâ⬠¦When Catherine I returns from Thrushcross Grange, she is unrecognizable to Heathcliff because she has evolved into a more complete version of herself that he cannot accept. Cathy I tries to embrace Heathcliff in a hug and, as William Blake would say, momentarily touch souls, but Heathcliff adopts a ââ¬Å"blackâ⬠, ââ¬Å"crossâ⬠expression, because the Catherine I that has returned is not the Catherine I that he wanted back (Brontà « 42). Heathcliffââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"shame and pride [throw] double gloom over his countenance, and [keep] him immoveableâ⬠(Brontà « 42). He stares at the girl he thought was his other half and cannot find anything familiar under the perfect dress and neat coils of silken hair. Heathcliff is ââ¬Å"immoveableâ⬠in that he will not be swayed to the new Cathy Iââ¬â¢s side, even if she contained this version of herself within all along. He mistakenly thinks that he is only in love with the Catherine I whom he thought he knew, rather than the person that Catherine I actually is, which includes Thrushcross Grangeââ¬â¢s influence. By forcing Cathy I into the walls of his perception, Heathcliff erases her personhood completely. While Heathclif f clings to the Catherine I that he remembers, Cathy I believes that if she belongs partially at Thrushcross Grange, then he must as well. Cathy I likes the person she became at Thrushcross Grange because she always had some Grange in her
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