Theme Of Moral Reconciliation In Wuthering Heights

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Using Wuthering Heights, identify the “spiritual reassessment or moral reconciliation” evident in the ending and explain its significance in the work as a whole.
Humans, by nature, love nothing more than a happy ending. It is a great satisfaction to see a hero overcome the central conflict and become victorious. However, in a story without a traditional hero for the reader to support, nor a resolvable conflict, how is a happy ending achieved? It is earned through a process of reconciliation and forgiveness. In Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte a moral reassessment is found when the characters choose to find peace rather than hold onto past grudges.
This spiritual conversion is clearly seen when Heathcliff loses to further continue his revenge. Heathcliff spends most of his adult life tormenting other people out of grief and hatred toward the world. However, he becomes unexpectedly blissful at the end of the novel and wanders aimlessly for days without eating or sleeping. In this strange state, he repeatedly claims that he will be with his love Catherine …show more content…

For instance, over the course of the novel, Hareton is turned from a hateful, ignorant brute into a kind, civilized man. This is supported by how Hareton only finds happiness once his yearning for knowledge is satisfied. Likewise, it is also seem when the Heights are finally abandoned by the characters in favor of Thrushcross Grange. Wuthering Heights is a violent and cruel place, void of rules or justice, just like a wilderness. Conversely, the Grande is warm and kind to its inhabitants, similar to civilization. Finally Heathcliff, who represents wildness in his passionate and untamed nature, dies. As Catherine Earnshaw put it, He’s not a rough diamond… he’s a fierce, pitiless, wolfish man.” (Bronte 90) It is only once the other characters are free of him and his influence that they are able to live

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