Following Linton's death, Cathy avoids Zillah and Hareton, although she and Hareton frequently argue. Nelly wishes Cathy could live with her in a small cottage she has acquired, but she knows it's improbable. She believes only another marriage could save Cathy, but it seems unlikely that she'll find someone to marry.
After Linton dies, what is left for Cathy? She has no money and is a prisoner at Wuthering Heights. Why is Hareton trying to learn to read? He wants to win Cathy's approval.
Catherine dies two hours after giving birth to a daughter.
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 Cathy.
In chapter 29 of Wuthering Heights, Heathcliff tells Nelly Dean about how he dug up Catherine's body just after she was buried, back in chapter sixteen. Heathcliff went alone to the churchyard and, wild in grief for Catherine, dug down to her coffin and attempted to wrench it open.
Catherine gives birth to a daughter, Cathy, delivering her two months early—the baby is born at midnight, and Catherine passes away two hours later. Upon hearing the news from Nelly, Heathcliff seems to already be aware.
When Catherine sees the wounds on Heathcliff's back from some mysterious master or parent, she doesn't treat them or kiss them, she licks them, as though it's her only sustenance in this overwhelming landscape that swallows people whole.
August/September 1801. Edgar is buried next to Catherine. While the grave was being dug, Heathcliff persuades/pays the sexton to remove the earth from her coffin and he opens it. He replaces it to prevent decomposition and removes the side of her coffin (away from Edgar's position) and covers it up.
Lockwood estimates Heathcliff as about forty and Cathy as not yet seventeen.
Catherine was about eighteen or nineteen years old when she died in Wuthering Heights.
Oh! you said you cared nothing for my sufferings! And I pray one prayer — I repeat it till my tongue stiffens — Catherine Earnshaw, may you not rest, as long as I am living! You said I killed you — haunt me, then!
1 Unwittingly, we must presume, the great neurologist extended his disdain to one of the great English novels, Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights, where the heroine, Catherine Earnshaw, died of a disease diagnosed as "brain fever".
Cathy is delighted to see him again, but Linton asks her not to kiss him because it would “take his breath away”. She asks him repeatedly if he is happy to see her again, but he first wondered why she stopped writing to him and he says 'yes' on being with his cousin again.
Whatever our souls are made out of, his and mine are the same.” Perhaps the most famous of all Wuthering Heights quotes, this snippet from Chapter 9 has Catherine expressing her deepest feelings for Heathcliff to the housekeeper Nelly Dean.
Linton loves Catherine, but he is also manipulative and abusive towards her. He loves her due to his father's manipulations, and he derives pleasure from seeing her suffer.
Linton's talk of love vexes Cathy, and she pushes his chair, sending him into a coughing fit. He uses this to claim that she injured him and worsened his condition; he guilts her into thinking she can nurse him back to health.
Wuthering Heights masquerades as a love story, but it is really a study of trauma. Catherine and Heathcliff both have Complex Post-traumatic Stress Disorder and also shows signs of BPD.
Answer and Explanation: In Emily Bronte's novel Wuthering Heights, Heathcliff leaves Wuthering Heights because he overhears Catherine Earnshaw say she can never marry him.
Later in life, he becomes a gentleman "in dress and aspect." Nelly Dean states that he could be an "American castaway." Heathcliff may have been of mixed race because he is described in the original book as a "dark-skinned gipsy" and "a little Lascar" – a 19th-century term for Indian sailors.
He says that he can forgive her for the pain she has caused him, but that he can never forgive her for the pain that she has caused herself—he adds that she has killed herself through her behavior, and that he could never forgive her murderer.
For many years he has now lived in the village of Thornton, actually right across the road from the house in which the Brontë sisters were born, before their father, Patrick, took them to Haworth when he took up his job as minister of the village, living in the now-famous parsonage.
Shortly after a night spent walking on the moors, Heathcliff dies. Hareton and young Catherine inherit Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange, and they plan to be married on the next New Year's Day.
There aren't any sex scenes between Cathy and Heathcliff or even implied. True, there are scenes with sexual undertones but Heathcliff has a very physical desire for Cathy. Had they actually had sex, their relationship might have gone on longer or might not have as the tensions would have been relieved.
Heathcliff's love for Catherine enables him to endure Hindley's maltreatment after Mr. Earnshaw's death. But after overhearing Catherine admit that she could not marry him, Heathcliff leaves. Nothing is known of his life away from her, but he returns with money.
The relationship between Catherine and Heathcliff is used as a central plot element of Wuthering Heights. The two are madly in love early in the book, but as the story continues, miscommunication and the class structures of the day forced the two apart.