After
Wuthering Heights has a somewhat happy ending, although Heathcliff and Catherine are never together in life, they are together after Heathcliff dies.
The novel ends with the death of Heathcliff, who has become a broken, tormented man, haunted by the ghost of the elder Catherine, next to whom he demands to be buried. His corpse is initially found by Nelly Dean, who, peeping into his room, spots him.
Catherine dies two hours after giving birth to a daughter.
Heathcliff is an antihero character in Emily Bronte's novel Wuthering Heights. He becomes mentally unstable after Catherine's death. While he does not commit suicide after losing his lover, he dies of starvation at the end of the story.
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.
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.
Secondly, there is no actual evidence in the book that the two of them ever had sex. Heathcliff ran away when he was sixteen and Catherine fifteen. It seems unlikely that they would have slept together before then.
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.
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.
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.
During Heathcliff's absence, Catherine marries Edgar Linton and moves into Thrushcross Grange, where she lives peacefully, her every desire indulged.
Isabella's Love for Heathcliff
The reader, Catherine, and Edgar know that Heathcliff is there for Catherine, but when Edgar's young sister, Isabella, becomes attracted to Heathcliff, reason flies out the window, creating dramatic irony. Like many young people in love, Isabella refuses to listen to Catherine's warnings.
Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights
"I lingered round them, under that benign sky; watched the moths fl uttering among the heath, and hare-bells; listened to the soft wind breathing through the grass; and wondered how any one could ever imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that quiet earth."
Catherine, the object of his obsession, becomes the essence of his life, yet, in a sense, he ends up murdering his love. Ironically, after her death, Heathcliff's obsession only intensifies. Heathcliff's love for Catherine enables him to endure Hindley's maltreatment after Mr. Earnshaw's death.
What is the main theme of Wuthering Heights? The main themes of this novel are love, passion, and vengeance. It is the love between Heathcliff and Catherine that permeates the novel, though it assumes dangerous proportions as the plot thickens. Catherine rejects Heathcliff choosing instead Edgar Linton.
Answer: In Wuthering Heights, Сatherine dies early - not from an illness, but from an exploding soul that could not bear the mistakes in her marriage choice. She died after childbirth, leaving a daughter, Сathy.
While the sexton was digging Edgar's grave, Heathcliff had him remove the earth from his beloved Catherine's, and he opened her coffin to gaze upon her face, which he says is still recognizable.
Answer and Explanation: Catherine starves herself in Wuthering Heights so that she does not have to give Heathcliff and Edgar, the two men in a love triangle with her, an answer about which one she chooses to be with.
Read as an expression of Emily Brontë's ambivalence about her sexual identity, Wuthering Heights is both a representation of homosexual energy and an attempt to contain or imprison it for fear of its social unacceptability and perhaps also of its sheer power.
Their relationship is portrayed in scenes of play that quickly become about domination and power. Cathy expresses her love by pulling out Heathcliff's hair and literally licking his wounds. Her actions are no less menacing when she takes advantage of Edgar's weak nature.
Because of her desire for social prominence, Catherine marries Edgar Linton instead of Heathcliff. Heathcliff's humiliation and misery prompt him to spend most of the rest of his life seeking revenge on Hindley, his beloved Catherine, and their respective children (Hareton and young Catherine).
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.
Answer and Explanation: Catherine does not marry Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights because she sees better opportunities for herself and him by marrying Edgar Linton.
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.