Heathcliff Riveting Moment Analysis

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The most riveting moment in the novel is when Heathcliff discovers of Catherine’s death from Nelly; for earlier Catherine declares that their love is like “eternal rocks beneath. I am Heathcliff...always on my mind - not as pleasure...but as my own being” (Bronte 100). Catherine propounds that their love is eternal, not even death will halt it. She is so certain that she even describes them as their own being; one in the same. As a result, Catherine’s death shocked me, mainly because now as the reader I have to witness, first hand, Heathcliff’s shock and rage; filled with anger, questions, and imagery; successfully constructing the most riveting moment in the novel. Before he accepts her death, his anger is projected, for he states “Damn you all! She wants none of your tears!” (Bronte …show more content…

Nelly uses imagery combined with allusion to earlier days in order to propound the true love Catherine experienced for Heathcliff before her death. In earlier days, Heathcliff and Catherine were described as inseparable, in true love with each other, however, over time, began to separate from each other. Nelly’s statement solidifies the true love Catherine felt right to her death; gripping me, for I know that Heathcliff’s rage is soon to come. This sudden realization drives Heathcliff mad, for she took her own life while in love with him, he wishes that “‘she wake in torment!’...with frightful vehemence, stamping his foot, and groaning in a sudden paroxysm of ungovernable passion” (Bronte 205). This sudden hatred towards Catherine shocks me, however, Nelly’s short but concrete statement, ungovernable passion, expounds Heathcliff’s uncontrollable, boundaryless love for Catherine that now drives him mad; a beautiful

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