While reading the story Wuthering Heights, I noticed
the story’s subject of love, but more importantly than love, is the subject of
revenge. Revenge started from the very beginning of the story and continued
until the very end. Heathcliff is the character that demonstrates the showing
of revenge the most. However, Hindley, I believe, started the cycle of revenge
and was the cause for all of the times that Heathcliff took revenge on others. Hindley
was the only male child of the family until Heathcliff was adopted in. When
Heathcliff was adopted in, Hindley felt his empowerment being taken away. Mr.
Earnshaw started to pay great attention to Heathcliff, taking some of the
attention of Hindley away. Catherine also spent more time with Heathcliff and
Hindley became jealous of that. So after
Mr. Earnshaw died, Hindley began the revenge cycle by taking revenge on Heathcliff.
Hindley made Heathcliff act as a servant and degraded him so Hindley could take
back his place of power in the household. As the characters grew older, Heathcliff began to take revenge on
Hindley by encouraging Hindley’s drunkenness
and gambling habits. Heathcliff made Hindley indebted to him by knowing Hindley
could not repay the loans and Heathcliff then takes Wuthering Heights away from
the person who harmed him. Heathcliff takes revenge on Edgar by forcing
young Catherine, Edgar’s daughter, to marry Linton. After Linton dies, Heathcliff
inherits the Thrushcross Grange property. Heathcliff took revenge on so many people
just because of the harmful childhood events he was put through. Heathcliff
could have chose to stop the revenge cycle but didn’t and ended up dying
because he put all of his energy into taking revenge on everyone. Heathcliff
took revenge on everyone to try to justify himself, but in the end it just wore
him out and it didn’t make him any happier than he was before.
The
theme of revenge being self-destructive is very prevalent in present day life.
Often times people hold grudges on other people and spend ways trying to take
revenge on the other person. Many of those times, the person taking revenge
still is not satisfied. People would be happier if they let the past times go
and forgave the other person. Revenge is not always harmful to the victim, but
also to the culprit their self, as Heathcliff demonstrates in the book. If
people forgave others and did not focus on the past and on ways to get back at the
other person, they would become much happier and could move on and improve
their life. By trying to take revenge on other people, a person cannot move on
from the past. In order to live a happier life, a person must not focus all of
their time on revenge and must focus on letting go of past hardships.
Good Brooke! For future blogs, work on developing your societal connection even more specifically. :-)
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