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"Wuthering Heights" depicts the gypsy outcast Heathcliff who is adopted by the old owner of the villa, and goes out to get rich due to humiliation and unsuccessful love. After returning, the story of revenge on Linton, a landlord who married his girlfriend Catherine, and his children is full of a strong fighting spirit against oppression and happiness, and it is always shrouded in a bizarre and tense romantic atmosphere.
After its publication, Wuthering Heights has always been regarded as one of the "most peculiar **" in the history of English literature, and a "strange book" that is "mysterious". The reason for this is that it reverses the sentimental sentimentality that prevails in contemporaries.
And with intense love, violent hatred, and the merciless revenge that arises from it, the low sadness and melancholy are replaced. It is like a peculiar lyric poem, full of rich imagination and fierce emotions between the lines, and has shocking artistic power.
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It seems complicated because the narrator is constantly changing. At first, it is from the perspective of Mr. Clauwood as a tenant, leading to the story of Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Heights. The official storyteller is Mrs. Dynne, who runs through the whole story, and in the story, Mrs. Dynne has three more names: Dinne, Nellie, and Allen, and if you don't pay attention to it, it will be messed up.
Moreover, when Mrs. Dynn is telling the story, the names of the characters change from time to time, and you have to pay attention to figure it out, and it takes a little effort to read it.
The storyline of this book is a bit complicated, and fortunately it ends up being a good ending, but this ending is always a bit sloppy to read. Heathcliff is the protagonist of the story, his childhood is so unhappy, his love is so unsmooth, he has been thinking about how to get revenge on his enemies all his life, how can a person born for revenge be happy? Seeing him so rude to Edgar, so rude to Isabella, so rude to his own son, Hareton and little Catherine, is a bit depressing to watch.
His rough side often jumped on the page, and every time I wrote about his brutality, I felt that I couldn't bear to read it again. Later he said that he always saw Catherine, and I thought he was thinking Catherine was crazy. And in the end he starved to death, and several times I read the text that he couldn't eat, and the description of his terrifying eyes, I thought he was going to die, who knows how many pages I read, only to see him open his hideous eyes on a rainy night, show a terrifying smile, and never move, only to know that he is really dead.
For Hareton, in fact, he loves him, at least more than his cowardly son Kobayashi, perhaps because he sees the epitome of his youth in Hareton, although he treats him brutally, but he still loves him in his heart. And Hareton, after Heathcliff's death, was the only one to shed tears for him. Reading this, I couldn't help but be touched by Hareton's kindness.
Catherine, who said that she was the heroine of **, died halfway through the book, maybe less than halfway. But in my opinion, the death is also a good thing for her, a relief. Between Edgar and Heathcliff, she couldn't choose, and if she didn't like Mr. Lindon, she wouldn't marry him, she wouldn't want to leave him.
I think Catherine has feelings for Linton, and although she despises his cowardice, she still has him and this family in her heart. Catherine's feelings for Heathcliff, although it is love, but I don't read the words of her burning love for Heathcliff in the book, more of her bad temper, either for this or for that, she is indeed a crazy woman. I don't like such a nasty character.
Edgar Linton, synonymous with cowardice, a man who can endure anything, the biggest temper is a punch to Heathcliff's throat, and the rest of the time, he embodies nothing but cowardice or cowardice. For his wife's infidelity, no matter how unwilling he was, he still endured it, more helplessly, pale, and powerless.
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