Wuthering Heights Contents
- Social / political context
- Educational context
- Religious / philosophical context of Wuthering Heights
- Literary context of Wuthering Heights
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 12
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 14
- Chapter 15
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 17
- Chapter 18
- Chapter 19
- Chapter 20
- Chapter 21
- Chapter 22
- Chapter 23
- Chapter 24
- Chapter 25
- Chapter 26
- Chapter 27
- Chapter 28
- Chapter 29
- Chapter 30
- Chapter 31
- Chapter 32
- Chapter 33
- Chapter 34
Chapter 34
Synopsis
Narrator: Nelly, then Lockwood.
Heathcliff keeps himself apart from the others most of the time and eats little. His death is described and his funeral. There are stories of ghostly sightings of him and Catherine. Hareton and Cathy are to be married on New Year’s Day and will live at the Grange. Lockwood visits the graveyard as he leaves the area.
Commentary
Heathcliff has a changed appearance. He is wild and pale, but also has ‘a strange, joyful glitter in his eyes’, probably because he expects to be with Catherine soon. He also seems to encourage Hareton and Cathy to be together. This appears to be more than simply accepting the inevitable; surely he sees in them the relationship that he and Catherine never managed to achieve.
Heathcliff wants to spend time outside, where he is more at home close to the moors and nature. We see brief glimpses of a gentler, more attractive Heathcliff in this final chapter. However, he will not turn to orthodox religion as Nelly entreats him to do. Instead, he outlines his requirements over his burial arrangements, which are carried out later.
When Nelly finds him dead, he is by the open window, drenched by the rain. The open window symbolizes the boundary between life and death, and the way that he has turned from looking out and the rain comes in suggests a blurring of that boundary. This idea is emphasised by the sightings of Heathcliff and Catherine in the area. Only Hareton is upset by Heathcliff’s death.
We were in April then: a time for new beginnings and new growth.
almost bright and cheerful: Cathy’s description of Heathcliff makes us realise that these terms have almost never been applied before to Heathcliff!
I am within sight of my heaven: notice that it is ‘my’ heaven- Heathcliff’s version, not the orthodox Christian one.
He was leaning against the ledge of an open lattice…: plenty of symbolism here. He is by the window that suggests a barrier to the heaven he wants, but it is open so there is little in the way now; the fire has died down, as have his emotions; the sound of the stream is a reminder of the importance of the moors to him, and could be a sign that life will go on even after his death.
That with the panelled bed: i.e: Catherine’s old room, as seen in Chapter 3.
a ghoul or a vampire? ... I had tended him in infancy: Nelly employs typical Gothic terminology yet balances this with her practical knowledge of Heathcliff – Brontë maintains the novel’s habitual balance between mystery and normality.
Where did he come from: a question that is never answered, emphasising Heathcliff’s air of mystery.
gazed at something within two yards' distance: the presence of Catherine is becoming more distinct.
Green: the local lawyer.
Titan: in Greek mythology the Titans were a race of giants.
A selfish, unchristian life: Nelly makes a final attempt to bring Heathcliff back to orthodoxy. He hardly answers this, talking instead about his funeral arrangements and again referring to ‘my heaven’.
sexton: A sexton is the person responsible for the maintenance of the church’s buildings and the surrounding graveyard.
My directions concerning the two coffins: as outlined in Chapter 29.
refused to bury you … kirk: a suicide could not be buried in consecrated ground.
prove, practically, that the dead are not annihilated: Heathcliff is threatening to haunt Nelly if she does not do what he wants.
The lattice .. had grazed one hand: This and the mention of blood echoes Lockwood’s damage to the apparition of Catherine in Chapter 3.
'Th' divil's harried off his soul: Joseph holds the medieval view that Satan has come to attack and claim his own i.e. Heathcliff.
thanks that the lawful master and the ancient stock were restored to their rights: Joseph has witnessed the fate of the Earnshaw home come full circle, after the interloping of the ‘cuckoo’ Heathcliff.
Hareton, the most wronged, was the only one that really suffered much: Heathcliff’s death is described in some detail and, surprisingly, through sentences like this, Brontë gives the whole event a feeling of sorrow and regret. Once Heathcliff has gone, the novel finishes very quickly.
The middle one: this is Catherine’s grave.
Investigating Chapter 34
- Trace references to heaven and hell, and to devils, fiends etc. in this chapter.
- What final view of Heathcliff do these references give?
- Re-read the final sentence of the novel.
- Is this a peaceful, romantic ending, suggesting a calm future, or does the phrase ‘wondered how anyone’ suggest ambiguity, coming as it does from the mouth of the unreliable narrator Lockwood?
Recently Viewed
-
Wuthering Heights » Chapter 34
now -
The Pardoner's Prologue and Tale » l.285-300
1 minute ago -
Wuthering Heights » Chapter 9
11 minutes ago -
Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale - free worksheet downloads
14 minutes ago -
Wuthering Heights » Weather and landscape
18 minutes ago -
The White Devil » The Role of Women
22 minutes ago -
Modernism
29 minutes ago -
Dubliners worksheet downloads
45 minutes ago -
A Level English Literature teaching materials on the poetry of John Keats by Crossref-it.info
45 minutes ago -
Wilfred Owen, selected poems » Exposure - Imagery, symbolism and themes
50 minutes ago -
Wilfred Owen, selected poems » Dulce et Decorum Est - Synopsis and commentary
50 minutes ago -
Wilfred Owen, selected poems » The Sentry - Synopsis and commentary
50 minutes ago -
Wuthering Heights » Chapter 16
1 hour ago -
Wuthering Heights » Images
1 hour ago -
Wuthering Heights » Emily Brontë and the novel
1 hour ago -
The White Devil » The malcontent
1 hour ago -
Blank verse in sixteenth century English drama
1 hour ago -
The relationship between Church and society in Medieval times
1 hour ago -
Tess of the d'Urbervilles » Chapter 14
1 hour ago -
Tess of the d'Urbervilles » Chapter 3
1 hour ago -
Wide Sargasso Sea » Jean Rhys' early life in Dominica
1 hour ago -
John Keats, selected poems » To Ailsa Rock: Synopsis and Commentary
1 hour ago -
The Winter's Tale » Act II, scene ii
2 hours ago -
Dubliners » Ivy Day in the Committee Room
2 hours ago -
Traditional western worldview of the nature of humanity
3 hours ago
Related material
Scan and go
Scan on your mobile for direct link.