I finished reading the book yesterday and was a bit sad cause I had nobody to discuss it with, but today I discovered your series and watched it entirely. It gave me so many new interesting perspectives and thought-provoking connections! Thank you so much for making this, I'm definitely looking forward to your future videos! :)
Thank you very much, and I am glad that you enjoyed the book! It's fantastic! Feel free to share your thoughts; I never get tired of talking about Wuthering Heights :D
Lockwood has Catherine on his mind because he's been reading her diary, but at this point he does not know she's dead. She says she's been wandering for twenty years, which almost corresponds to the amount of time she's been dead (I think it's more like 16 years, but maybe ghosts aren't great at keeping track of time!) and I think points to her being a ghost rather than a dream as it is something else that Lockwood didn't know.
I have just finished watching your series of videos on the novel Wuthering Heights. I can only describe it as absolutely outstanding. You say that it took a lot of time and effort. Well, that is clear. You have really done your research well and worked very hard to put all this together. You have a very professional way of making this densely packed novel easier to understand. I will recommend your videos to my colleagues and students. Thank you very much indeed.
Wow! Thanks for this series. I've read Wuthering Heights about once a year for 53 years; I just finished another re-read when I found your videos. And you've given me some new things to think about. "The Earnshaws have won; when Cathy marries Hareton she'll take his name." That was like a thunderclap after all these decades. And I never thought of Catherine possessing Heathcliff or pressing him to take revenge (on her own daughter? I suppose it's possible; she died in childbirth, so in a sense her daughter killed her. That's really dark, but I kind of like it.) By the way, it's easy to forget that Catherine was only 19 or 20 when she died, so she wasn't much past childhood. But as you say, her true childhood came to an end when she was 12 and met the Lintons. I loved your interpretation of why her ghost was a child. When I was 12 and first read WH, I thought it was a romance (I watched the Laurence Olivier movie the night before.) But when I grew up I realized it's more of a psychological thriller and gothic horror story. And a rousingly good one. At this stage in my life I probably keep coming back to it out of nostalgia as much as anything. Thanks again for giving me some twists to think about!
Thanks for your comment. I've been reading this myself at least once a year for a while now. I do it in winter every time! Glad you liked the video, and it's interesting what you said about how your thoughts changed about it every time you read it. I guess it's just one of those stories with so many threads and things to relate to, so as you change so does your perspective on it.
@@JoshuaJClarkeKelsall thank you :) I like to think Hareton and Cathy's love mirrors Heathcliff and Catherine's love, in other words, " the Heathcliff and Catherine relationship done right", had they been able to love each other happily, and in my opinion when Heathcliff realizes this, he is eventually able to let go of his hate and hunger for revenge.
My theory/interpretation is that the strong bond between the souls of Catherine and Heathcliff is keeping Catherine's spirit bound to earth until he dies himself, she keeps haunting Heathcliff, whereas he will not let her rest in peace. Througout the book there are some hints to this: Heathcliff says he "has a strong faith in ghosts" and has been praying for her spirit to return. In the 3th chapter Zillah puts mr Lockwood in a room, but asks him to not reveal him being there, because the master would "never let anyone lodge there willingly." Later, after mr. Lockwood's experience, Heathcliff gets on the bed and cries "Cathy, do come, oh do come once more...hear me this time, Catherine, at last" So apparently Heathcliff has had a similar experience. The first time he digs up her coffin he stops before opening it, because he has a feeling her spirit is present, confirming that she is not yet gone. After Edgar dies, Heathcliff has Catherine's coffin dug up again, and when he opens it he discoveres that her body is not that much corrupted yet. Is she waiting for him? He then removes one side of the coffin, so that when he dies their coffins can be linked and their bodies can decompose together. What I really like about this book is that it leaves a lot of room for speculation, the supernatural elements are never confirmed as real.
Nice interpretation, I like it! And yes, the novel so ambiguous that there are pretty much infinite interpretations, especially when it comes to the supernatural elements. :)
We have just finished your in-depth dissemination of Wuthering Heights and would like to congratulate you on a job well done. We have used your videos within our English literature class as a fabulous resource after having read the book in home schooling. It was fabulous to have someone young, interesting, and relatable for the kids. Thank you.
If I understand accurately what you are saying here about the mystical/supernatural relationship between Heathcliff and Cathy, the revenge plot, and the function of Cathy's ghost, I must disagree with some aspects of your interpretation. In the first place, I don't see how Cathy's spirit can exist within Heathcliff, driving his revenge, and at the same time be the elusive ghostly presence on the moors with whom he constantly strives to connect----a connection which is not achieved until his death. In his last days, he describes feeling tortured by a vision of her which only he can see, and her appearance drains away his drive to complete his revenge on Hareton and Cathy, as Bronte makes clear. Far from being the avenging spirit within him, she intervenes to PREVENT his ultimate vengeance, for it is only when he relinquishes that goal that his spirit is free to reunite with hers. Revenge has been his only object for twenty years, and I think that has separated him from Cathy. If Cathy's spirit were already within him, partaking in his revenge, his anguished cry of "How can I live without my soul!" is rendered meaningless. She IS his soul, and he needs to find it again to be whole and complete, just as her restless spirit needs to reclaim his for the same reason.
I don't really suggest one interpretation in this video, rather I suggest a few. I think my preferred interpretation is that Cathy is external to Heathcliff, and that the reason she is at the window of Wuthering Heights as a child is meant to mirror her being at the Linton's window as a child from the beginning of the novel, only now she wants back into Wuthering Heights (and Heathcliff), whereas before she wanted to go into the Linton's. I would say I agree with your point that it is only after he lets go of his revenge that he can be united with Catherine, but I don't think Catherine has anything to do with him letting it go. I think it's through Hareton and his inability to hate him and make him unhappy that does the work. Partly this is because he sees Catherine in Hareton, and so when he sees Hareton in love with Cathy, he can't keep revenge going, even though he never likes Cathy, he can't do that to Hareton. I think the point about Heathcliff being possessed by Catherine works more as a metaphor though now, having read your comment and thought of it, all the same. Thanks for your thoughts!
I don't think it's necessarily true that the Earnshaws won in the end. It's true that their name survives but Hareton and Cathy actually made the decision to live at Thrushcross Grange and therefore abandoning Wuthering Heights. That's rather interesting when you think of what both of these places and names stand for in terms of the civilized world and nature. The Earnshaws living at Thrushcross Grange. Although the wild natural place is abandoned, it's core still lives on and although the place of the civilized world lives on, there is still nature at it's core. Maybe that's Emily Bronte telling us that no matter how you think that you are living in a civilized world, there is still always nature underneath it. Or that you can't abandon the nature in your very being no matter how civilized the world is. On another note though, I absolutely agree that Cathrine wasn't a maternal figure. At all. If she cared even a little bit for the life of her daughter she wouldn't have tried to starve herself to death. Or at the very least put her plan on hold until the baby was born. She didn't do any of that though. She actively withhold food and nutrition from the fetus growing inside of her which could not have had disastrous consequences for little Cathy. I don't think it's a stretch to say that she could have died along with her mother. Or later since she was born two whole months early (at least that's what my translation implied) I'm actually surprised she survived at all. The way Cathrine treated her child makes a great parallel to how Heathcliff treated his own son though. They both didn't really about them at all. They didn't love them and they didn't help them growing up. They didn't even do the basic necessities to keep them alive. In Heathcliff's case he let his son die by don't calling the doctor so Lintons illness got worse and worse and in Cathrines case she withhold the food and nutrition her daughter desperately needed to stay alive. They killed or risked killing their children in the very same way, namely through neglect. This also goes to show how hopeless Heathcliff and Cathrine were as characters (and how unable to change they were) cause if their own children can't even make an impact on them, nobody would be able to. They only ever knew each other and that wasn't going to change no matter what. Last but not least tough I want to thank you for all of these great videos on Wuthering Heights! They helped me so much in understanding what all of this was about and the meanings behind Emily Brontes wonderful novel. I just finished reading it for the first time recently and I was absolutely stunned by how amazing it is.
Thanks for the different explanations of the ghost's appearance and for the image of the twin-monster. I agree with you: I prefer "the darkest" interprentations, but all of them are really interesting, along with Heathcliff's "fantastic" origins All my compliments!
I am inclined to believe that Lockward saw the ghost of Catherine rather than dream it not only because she introduced herself as Linton but also because she says that she has wondered as a ghost for 20 years. Lockward had no previous knowledge that Catherine had been dead for 20 years.
Man, this serie was so great! When I picked up this book, at a donation fair in Rio de Janeiro, I could never have imagined that I would've come across something so impactful and absolutely brilliant! And the most amazing and fantastic thing is that your videos were still able to add more points to think about and could show me things that I didn't got before. Man I am very grateful for your work and I want to give you my most sincere congratulations! You're the man! :D (so sorry for my poor english...)
Thank you for your series! Your work really helped to understand the book on so many levels. And it is really important with the classic books because there is so much more than just a plot and it's not always easy to see beyond it. Especially when it comes to religion or history. I have never read the Bible and i wouldn't understand all the religious references though i think they are really important here. Your interpretations were clever, well structured, easy to listen to and very interesting! Thanks again and good luck with your future works!
Thank you so much for making these videos! I read Wuthering Heights a few months ago and you just made me want to read it again. You are very eloquent and excellent at explaining each part of your analysis, and I could notice you're as passionate about this book as I am. Bravo! Keep up the amazing job. Greetings from Argentina!
One day perhaps, I've got the Dracula series next, and then I might branch out and do some music analysis, but I could see myself doing some of those novels one day! :)
It just dawned on me. She shouldn’t of agonized that she loved Heathcliff she CHOSE Mr. Linton for the lifestyle. So why should she agonize? What she should have done is live is poverty with Heathcliff then sure enough she would’ve got over him because he was likely a domestic batterer. Sort of an immature sense of confusion for the girl. And by the way it is not believable that Heathcliff became wealthy and owned Wuthering Heights.
I finished reading the book yesterday and was a bit sad cause I had nobody to discuss it with, but today I discovered your series and watched it entirely. It gave me so many new interesting perspectives and thought-provoking connections! Thank you so much for making this, I'm definitely looking forward to your future videos! :)
Thank you very much, and I am glad that you enjoyed the book! It's fantastic! Feel free to share your thoughts; I never get tired of talking about Wuthering Heights :D
Ditto! I wish you would start an online bookclub of classics. Your diction & grammar are inspiring as well for those of us ling retired from academia.
Lockwood has Catherine on his mind because he's been reading her diary, but at this point he does not know she's dead. She says she's been wandering for twenty years, which almost corresponds to the amount of time she's been dead (I think it's more like 16 years, but maybe ghosts aren't great at keeping track of time!) and I think points to her being a ghost rather than a dream as it is something else that Lockwood didn't know.
That's a good point! I am inclined to the interpretation that the ghost is real, so this makes it even clearer to me! :)
I think it's '17 years (second Catherine's age) + 3 years (absence of Heathcliff) = 20 years'
I have just finished watching your series of videos on the novel Wuthering Heights. I can only describe it as absolutely outstanding. You say that it took a lot of time and effort. Well, that is clear. You have really done your research well and worked very hard to put all this together. You have a very professional way of making this densely packed novel easier to understand. I will recommend your videos to my colleagues and students.
Thank you very much indeed.
Thank you very much! I'm glad that you enjoyed the videos and found them so helpful. :)
Wow! Thanks for this series. I've read Wuthering Heights about once a year for 53 years; I just finished another re-read when I found your videos. And you've given me some new things to think about. "The Earnshaws have won; when Cathy marries Hareton she'll take his name." That was like a thunderclap after all these decades.
And I never thought of Catherine possessing Heathcliff or pressing him to take revenge (on her own daughter? I suppose it's possible; she died in childbirth, so in a sense her daughter killed her. That's really dark, but I kind of like it.)
By the way, it's easy to forget that Catherine was only 19 or 20 when she died, so she wasn't much past childhood. But as you say, her true childhood came to an end when she was 12 and met the Lintons. I loved your interpretation of why her ghost was a child.
When I was 12 and first read WH, I thought it was a romance (I watched the Laurence Olivier movie the night before.) But when I grew up I realized it's more of a psychological thriller and gothic horror story. And a rousingly good one. At this stage in my life I probably keep coming back to it out of nostalgia as much as anything.
Thanks again for giving me some twists to think about!
Thanks for your comment. I've been reading this myself at least once a year for a while now. I do it in winter every time!
Glad you liked the video, and it's interesting what you said about how your thoughts changed about it every time you read it. I guess it's just one of those stories with so many threads and things to relate to, so as you change so does your perspective on it.
♥️♥️♥️
(Melanie here) I just read Wuthering Heights for the first time. Your videos are excellent. I really enjoyed your insights.
I have always thought Hareton and Cathy's love redeemed Catherine and Heathcliff's love. Thank you for this amazing video 🖤
That's a nice way to think of that :)
@@JoshuaJClarkeKelsall thank you :) I like to think Hareton and Cathy's love mirrors Heathcliff and Catherine's love, in other words, " the Heathcliff and Catherine relationship done right", had they been able to love each other happily, and in my opinion when Heathcliff realizes this, he is eventually able to let go of his hate and hunger for revenge.
My theory/interpretation is that the strong bond between the souls of Catherine and Heathcliff is keeping Catherine's spirit bound to earth until he dies himself, she keeps haunting Heathcliff, whereas he will not let her rest in peace.
Througout the book there are some hints to this: Heathcliff says he "has a strong faith in ghosts" and has been praying for her spirit to return. In the 3th chapter Zillah puts mr Lockwood in a room, but asks him to not reveal him being there, because the master would "never let anyone lodge there willingly." Later, after mr. Lockwood's experience, Heathcliff gets on the bed and cries "Cathy, do come, oh do come once more...hear me this time, Catherine, at last" So apparently Heathcliff has had a similar experience.
The first time he digs up her coffin he stops before opening it, because he has a feeling her spirit is present, confirming that she is not yet gone. After Edgar dies, Heathcliff has Catherine's coffin dug up again, and when he opens it he discoveres that her body is not that much corrupted yet. Is she waiting for him? He then removes one side of the coffin, so that when he dies their coffins can be linked and their bodies can decompose together.
What I really like about this book is that it leaves a lot of room for speculation, the supernatural elements are never confirmed as real.
Nice interpretation, I like it! And yes, the novel so ambiguous that there are pretty much infinite interpretations, especially when it comes to the supernatural elements. :)
We have just finished your in-depth dissemination of Wuthering Heights and would like to congratulate you on a job well done.
We have used your videos within our English literature class as a fabulous resource after having read the book in home schooling.
It was fabulous to have someone young, interesting, and relatable for the kids.
Thank you.
Thank you, I am glad that you and your kids found the videos helpful. :)
If I understand accurately what you are saying here about the mystical/supernatural relationship between Heathcliff and Cathy, the revenge plot, and the function of Cathy's ghost, I must disagree with some aspects of your interpretation. In the first place, I don't see how Cathy's spirit can exist within Heathcliff, driving his revenge, and at the same time be the elusive ghostly presence on the moors with whom he constantly strives to connect----a connection which is not achieved until his death. In his last days, he describes feeling tortured by a vision of her which only he can see, and her appearance drains away his drive to complete his revenge on Hareton and Cathy, as Bronte makes clear. Far from being the avenging spirit within him, she intervenes to PREVENT his ultimate vengeance, for it is only when he relinquishes that goal that his spirit is free to reunite with hers. Revenge has been his only object for twenty years, and I think that has separated him from Cathy. If Cathy's spirit were already within him, partaking in his revenge, his anguished cry of "How can I live without my soul!" is rendered meaningless. She IS his soul, and he needs to find it again to be whole and complete, just as her restless spirit needs to reclaim his for the same reason.
I don't really suggest one interpretation in this video, rather I suggest a few. I think my preferred interpretation is that Cathy is external to Heathcliff, and that the reason she is at the window of Wuthering Heights as a child is meant to mirror her being at the Linton's window as a child from the beginning of the novel, only now she wants back into Wuthering Heights (and Heathcliff), whereas before she wanted to go into the Linton's.
I would say I agree with your point that it is only after he lets go of his revenge that he can be united with Catherine, but I don't think Catherine has anything to do with him letting it go. I think it's through Hareton and his inability to hate him and make him unhappy that does the work. Partly this is because he sees Catherine in Hareton, and so when he sees Hareton in love with Cathy, he can't keep revenge going, even though he never likes Cathy, he can't do that to Hareton.
I think the point about Heathcliff being possessed by Catherine works more as a metaphor though now, having read your comment and thought of it, all the same. Thanks for your thoughts!
I watched all your WH videos. Now, I have to reread the novel. You threw spotlights that make it so much more interesting.
Thank you, I hope you enjoy your reading!
I don't think it's necessarily true that the Earnshaws won in the end. It's true that their name survives but Hareton and Cathy actually made the decision to live at Thrushcross Grange and therefore abandoning Wuthering Heights. That's rather interesting when you think of what both of these places and names stand for in terms of the civilized world and nature. The Earnshaws living at Thrushcross Grange. Although the wild natural place is abandoned, it's core still lives on and although the place of the civilized world lives on, there is still nature at it's core.
Maybe that's Emily Bronte telling us that no matter how you think that you are living in a civilized world, there is still always nature underneath it. Or that you can't abandon the nature in your very being no matter how civilized the world is.
On another note though, I absolutely agree that Cathrine wasn't a maternal figure. At all. If she cared even a little bit for the life of her daughter she wouldn't have tried to starve herself to death. Or at the very least put her plan on hold until the baby was born. She didn't do any of that though. She actively withhold food and nutrition from the fetus growing inside of her which could not have had disastrous consequences for little Cathy. I don't think it's a stretch to say that she could have died along with her mother. Or later since she was born two whole months early (at least that's what my translation implied) I'm actually surprised she survived at all.
The way Cathrine treated her child makes a great parallel to how Heathcliff treated his own son though. They both didn't really about them at all. They didn't love them and they didn't help them growing up. They didn't even do the basic necessities to keep them alive. In Heathcliff's case he let his son die by don't calling the doctor so Lintons illness got worse and worse and in Cathrines case she withhold the food and nutrition her daughter desperately needed to stay alive. They killed or risked killing their children in the very same way, namely through neglect.
This also goes to show how hopeless Heathcliff and Cathrine were as characters (and how unable to change they were) cause if their own children can't even make an impact on them, nobody would be able to. They only ever knew each other and that wasn't going to change no matter what.
Last but not least tough I want to thank you for all of these great videos on Wuthering Heights! They helped me so much in understanding what all of this was about and the meanings behind Emily Brontes wonderful novel. I just finished reading it for the first time recently and I was absolutely stunned by how amazing it is.
Thanks!
Thanks for the different explanations of the ghost's appearance and for the image of the twin-monster. I agree with you: I prefer "the darkest" interprentations, but all of them are really interesting, along with Heathcliff's "fantastic" origins All my compliments!
I am inclined to believe that Lockward saw the ghost of Catherine rather than dream it not only because she introduced herself as Linton but also because she says that she has wondered as a ghost for 20 years. Lockward had no previous knowledge that Catherine had been dead for 20 years.
Man, this serie was so great! When I picked up this book, at a donation fair in Rio de Janeiro, I could never have imagined that I would've come across something so impactful and absolutely brilliant! And the most amazing and fantastic thing is that your videos were still able to add more points to think about and could show me things that I didn't got before. Man I am very grateful for your work and I want to give you my most sincere congratulations! You're the man! :D (so sorry for my poor english...)
Thanks, that means a lot. Glad you enjoyed the videos! :)
Thank you for your series! Your work really helped to understand the book on so many levels. And it is really important with the classic books because there is so much more than just a plot and it's not always easy to see beyond it. Especially when it comes to religion or history. I have never read the Bible and i wouldn't understand all the religious references though i think they are really important here. Your interpretations were clever, well structured, easy to listen to and very interesting! Thanks again and good luck with your future works!
Thank you, I'm glad you appreciated the videos! :)
Magnificent! I have really enjoyed your book analyzing. Thank you!
From somebody who have read the book in Hebrew.
I'm glad you enjoyed the series! :)
Thank you so much for making these videos! I read Wuthering Heights a few months ago and you just made me want to read it again. You are very eloquent and excellent at explaining each part of your analysis, and I could notice you're as passionate about this book as I am. Bravo! Keep up the amazing job. Greetings from Argentina!
Thank you so much, I'm glad you enjoyed the videos! :)
Withering Heights are full of crazy characters…disturbed and traumatise all their lives…crazy.
Thank you very much for this amazing series of videos!
@@o0ocarolinao0o Thank you, I'm glad you liked them!
Absolutely brill bestie! 🎉
Thanks! :)
Love the analysis
I love your introduction and the music!😍 Thanks for this analysis, so interesting!
Thank you very much, I'm glad you enjoyed it! :)
i love your intros~
Good stuff brother!
Thanks!
Yes, please do a Dracula series!
Soon.... :)
Man this is helpfu for my exam.thanks alot 😊🌹
Please more like these - how about Mansfield Park? Middlemarch? Great Expectations? The Return of the Native? Anna Karenina? All of the above... 😎
One day perhaps, I've got the Dracula series next, and then I might branch out and do some music analysis, but I could see myself doing some of those novels one day! :)
what do you think of the kate bush song??? it would be cool to make a video about that if youre ever in the mood!!
The gothic elements
Au Revoir? 🤔 (Green Fire) 🌈🦉
It just dawned on me. She shouldn’t of agonized that she loved Heathcliff she CHOSE Mr. Linton for the lifestyle. So why should she agonize? What she should have done is live is poverty with Heathcliff then sure enough she would’ve got over him because he was likely a domestic batterer. Sort of an immature sense of confusion for the girl. And by the way it is not believable that Heathcliff became wealthy and owned Wuthering Heights.