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viernes, 23 de agosto de 2013

my opinion



I think that at first the book is boring and I could not understand the story because of the type of language used

but slower after reading a story I found very funny and romantic and able to identify parts of my life in the book

the only thing hard is memorizing all personajer and makes each one because they were very difficult names

in the end the story is beautiful and confusing because it talks about many stories within the book more

what could happend in the next chapters



I think katherine forget to change as Heathcliff because she escaped and Heathcliff's foster father entered a state of deprecion as it appears that his wife is in poor health.

Heathcliff might travel for a time to forget all these experiences and possibly on those trips Meeting on a very beautiful woman and love her

and when he returns to Wuthering Heights his father died of deprecion

about what talk about from page 48



Mr Lockwood, a rich man from the south took Grange in the north of England for peace and recuperation after he arrived he visited Mr Heathcliff who actually live in Wuthering Heights

in the childhood of heatheliff The story begins thirty years before when the Earnshaw family lived at Wuthering Heights.

Heathclif found a girl when he was 14 years old and the name of she is Catherine. Heathcliff and Catherine are like twins, spending hours on the moors together. but one day they.

Hindley becomes master of Wuthering Heights and forces Heathcliff to become a servant instead of a member of the family.

Heathclif and cathy were wild an the run away but at the midle of the travel cathy and Heathcli were separeited

Five weeks later, Catherine returns to Wuthering Heights but she has now changed, looking and acting as a lady. She laughs at Heathcliff's unkempt appearance and, the next day when the Lintons visit, he dresses up to impress her.

jueves, 11 de julio de 2013

characters

Heathcliff: Found, presumably orphaned, on the streets of Liverpool and taken to Wuthering Heights by Mr Earnshaw and reluctantly cared for by the family. He and Catherine grew close.
Catherine Earnshaw: First introduced to the reader after her death, through Lockwood's discovery of her diary and carvings. She seems unsure whether she is—or wants to become—more like Heathcliff, or more like Edgar. It is as if she wants both, even perhaps cannot be fully herself without both, and yet society or human nature makes that impossible.
Edgar Linton: Introduced as a child in the Linton family, he resides at Thrushcross Grange. Edgar's style and manners are in sharp contrast to Heathcliff's, who instantly dislikes him, and Catherine, who is drawn to him. Catherine marries him instead of Heathcliff because of his higher social status, with disastrous results. From the perspective of feminist theory, this exemplifies the problems inherent in a social structure in which women can gain prestige and financial security only through marriage.






Nelly Dean: The main narrator of the novel, Nelly is a servant for all three generations of the Earnshaw and Linton families. In a sense, she straddles the "culture versus nature" divide. She is humbly born and has lived and worked amid the rough manners of Wuthering Heights, but is an educated woman who has experienced the more genteel manners of Thrushcross Grange.




between characters is a relationship over history, both hate relationships or affection shown so this




black line: son or daughter of; if dotted it means adoption
red line: wedding; if double it means second wedding
pink line: love
blue line: affection
green line: hate
light yellow area: plot driving characters
violet area: external observers