Publish with us

Connect with us

Wuthering Heights

Emily Bronte
Select Preferred Format

Wuthering Heights is the story of the relationship between Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, the orphan boy her father adopts. While Catherine feels deeply attached to Heathcliff, her brother Hindley despises him as a rival. Heathcliff is torn between his love for Catherine and the rage and humiliation he suffers at the hands of everybody else. When he can no longer stand it, he leaves the Heights during a violent summer storm. In his absence Catherine marries, but her tormented heart belongs eternally to Heathcliff, who is determined to extract his tyrannical revenge. With its defiance of social convention and its unparalleled emotional intensity, Wuthering Heights is a deeply moving tale of tragedy.

Published: Jul/2019

ISBN: 9789814867849

Length: 328 Pages

Wuthering Heights

Emily Bronte

Wuthering Heights is the story of the relationship between Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, the orphan boy her father adopts. While Catherine feels deeply attached to Heathcliff, her brother Hindley despises him as a rival. Heathcliff is torn between his love for Catherine and the rage and humiliation he suffers at the hands of everybody else. When he can no longer stand it, he leaves the Heights during a violent summer storm. In his absence Catherine marries, but her tormented heart belongs eternally to Heathcliff, who is determined to extract his tyrannical revenge. With its defiance of social convention and its unparalleled emotional intensity, Wuthering Heights is a deeply moving tale of tragedy.

Select Preferred Format

Emily Bronte

Emily Brontë (1818-48). Best known for her only novel, Wuthering Heights, and a collection of surviving poems, she remains one of the most intensely original and passionate voices in English literature. Emily Brontë was born in Thornton, Yorkshire, in 1818 and moved to Haworth when her father was made perpetual curate there. The following year her mother, Maria Branwell, died, leaving five daughters and a son who were looked after by their mother's sister Elizabeth.
Emily's two eldest sisters, Maria and Elizabeth, died in childhood, following a stay at Cowan Bridge School, the model for Lowood in Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre. To amuse themselves the Brontë children created fantasy worlds based on reading from a wide range of sources. Emily and Anne created Gondal, an imaginary kingdom for which they wrote annals and journals, which unfortunately have not survived. Emily briefly attended the school at Cowan Bridge, but was wretched and homesick for Haworth and the Yorkshire moors, and returned home after only three months. She became a governess in Halifax but planned with Charlotte to set up a school at Haworth, and together they went to the Pensionnate Heger in Brussels to increase their qualifications. Emily returned home on the death of her aunt in 1842 and remained there for the rest of her life.
Her poems were discovered by Charlotte in 1846 and published in a joint volume entitled Poems by Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell. It included the pieces on which her reputation as a fine poet now rests: 'To Imagination', 'Plead for Me' and 'Last Lines'. Emily Brontë died from tuberculosis in 1848, only a few months after the death of her brother, Branwell.

More By The Author