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    behaviour in chapters 9 and 10 of Wuthering Heights.’ To what extent do you agree with this statement? (40 marks) Chapters 9 and 10 see Catherine Earnshaw confess her love for Heathcliff but ultimately agree to marry Edgar Linton for the betterment of her social status. Heathcliff is also transformed after three years‚ and it is obvious that both he and Catherine are still very much in love. Whether Catherine’s behaviour in these chapters can be viewed as anything but disgusting is highly subjective

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    Antony and Cleopatra

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    the novel‚ Healthcliff and Catherine Earnshaw had terrible communication. After Catherine had gone back to Wuthering Heights from Thrushcross Grange for the first time‚ she was disgusted by how uncivilized Heathcliff was after becoming accustomed to Edgar Linton’s proper manners. Heathcliff finally snapped and ran away after overhearing Catherine tell Nelly that she could not marry Healthcliff because he was too low classed for her. When Healthcliff ran away‚ Catherine realized that he did not know

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    Wuthering Heights

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    Wuthering Heights In A Nutshell Published in 1847‚ Wuthering Heights was the only novel Emily Brontë published‚ and she died the year after it came out. It is the story of Heathcliff‚ a dark outsider who falls in love with the feisty Catherine and rages and revenges against every obstacle that prevents him from being with her. Wuthering Heights is violent even by today’s standards and is not only full of references to demons‚ imps of Satan‚ and ghouls‚ but also depicts some pretty disturbing scenes

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    young Catherine and Hareton who will soon marry: “ ‘It is a poor conclusion‚ is it not‚’ he observed‚ having brooded a while on the scene he had just witnessed. ‘An absurd termination to my violent exertions?” (322). The novel’s ending satisfies the dilemmas of the story‚ such as young Catherine’s future and the happiness of Heathcliff‚ and it fulfills the reader’s desire for a happy ending. Although the Earnshaw family is slowly dwindling due to incestuous marriages amongst kin‚ Catherine and Hareton

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    irrational‚ that is female representatives of nature. The "female rage" therefore becomes the central theme of the novel. Catherine is the raging female in Wuthering Heights‚ who "fell" as a result of her tasting the "poisonous food of culture". The product of this taste of education is here‚ unlike the triumphant self-discovery in the male Bildungsroman‚ anxious self-denial. As Catherine doesn’t even know her name‚ she cannot know who she is or what she is destined to be. Not only do women have to "fall"

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    Wuthering Heights.

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    really characterize her characters. Secondly‚ it’s not just the setting the Bronte tends to show the separate sides of. Bronte uses many of her character’s relationships to highlight this extreme theme as well. For instance‚ take Catherine Earnshaw

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    man who appears to be one of the family although he dresses and talks like a servant. Being snowed in‚ he has to stay the night and is shown to an unused chamber where he finds books and graffiti from a former inhabitant of the farmhouse called "Catherine". When he falls asleep‚ his dreams are prompted by this person and he has a nightmare where he sees her as a ghost trying to get in through the window. He wakes and is unable to return to sleep so‚ as soon as the sun rises‚ he is escorted back to

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    A Banned Passion

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    brought to Wuthering Heights as a child and eventually ends up owning it; Catherine Earnshaw‚ a woman Heathcliff falls in love with but eventually dies in childbirth; Edgar Linton‚ Heathcliff’s archenemy who marries Catherine; and Ellen Dean‚ a.k.a. Nelly‚ who is the narrator of the story. The overall conflict of the story is that Heathcliff has always loved Catherine‚ who also loves him‚ but never end up together because Catherine marries Edgar Linton instead to raise her status and wealth‚ and then

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    The Salvation Army

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    The Salvation Army is an international charitable organisation‚ the Salvation Army is a worldwide organisation consisting of soldiers‚ officers and adherents known as Salvationists. Its founders Catherine and William Booth sought to bring salvation to the poor‚ destitute and hungry. It has a presence in 126 countries‚ running charity shops‚ operating shelters for the homeless and providing disaster relief and humanitarian aid to developing countries. The Salvation Army was founded in 1865 in London

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    symbolizes evil while Emily Bronte portrays him as a jealous‚ controlling‚ and revengeful man‚ who through his actions ruins the lives of numerous characters. One may believe that Heathcliff is very jealous of Catherine and Edgar’s marriage. An example to support this is when Heathcliff hears Catherine agree to marry Edgar Linton “it would degrade me to marry Heathcliff now” (Bronte 114) he leaves Wuthering Heights. The degrading of Heathcliff by Hindley‚ of forcing him into a lower social status results

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