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Wuthering Heights

by Emily Brontë

Te a c h e r ’ s
Material
C O N T E N T S

To the Teacher ...................................................................................................................... 3

Before Reading ..................................................................................................................... 5

After Reading: Extra Challenges ......................................................................................... 6

After Reading: Group Work ................................................................................................. 7

Possible Answers to Group Work ....................................................................................... 8

Worksheet 1: Chapters 1-8 .................................................................................................. 9

Answers to Worksheet 1 .................................................................................................... 10

Worksheet 2: Chapters 9-Epilogue .................................................................................... 11

Answers to Worksheet 2 ................................................................................................... 12

Final Test ............................................................................................................................. 13

Answers to Final Test ......................................................................................................... 14

Answers to Questions in the Reader ................................................................................. 15

Before using the following teacher’s material, we recommend that


you read the Burlington Reader Series general information leaflet.

Copyright © 1999 Burlington Books


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Wuthering Heights

TO THE TEACHER

LIST OF MAIN CHARACTERS

Heathcliff: a homeless boy adopted by Mr Earnshaw.


Cathy Earnshaw: Mr Earnshaw’s daughter and Heathcliff’s friend.
Hindley Earnshaw: Mr Earnshaw’s son and Heathcliff’s enemy.
Edgar Linton: a young man whose family lives near the Earnshaws.
Nelly Dean: a loyal servant who narrates the story.

P L O T S U M M A RY

The story starts when Mr Lockwood visits his landlord, Mr Heathcliff, at his house, Wuthering Heights.
Heathcliff is unpleasant and inhospitable, but due to a severe snowstorm, Mr Lockwood is forced to stay
overnight. He is awakened from his sleep by a tapping noise at the window. When he opens it, he discovers
a ghostly-looking young woman who begs to be let in. She says her name is Catherine Linton and that she
has been roaming the moors for twenty years. When Heathcliff hears the commotion, he rushes in and
shouts for Cathy to return. Later, Lockwood asks Nelly Dean, his housekeeper, who used to work at
Wuthering Heights, to tell him about the strange people who live there. She agrees, and her story begins.
One day, Mr Earnshaw, the owner of Wuthering Heights, brings home a poor gypsy boy. He names him
Heathcliff. To his dismay, both his wife and son, Hindley, reject the boy. Only his daughter, Cathy,
befriends him. Soon after, Mrs Earnshaw dies and the rivalry between Hindley and Heathcliff grows.
Hindley is sent to a boarding school and returns four years later when his father dies. Accompanied by
Frances, his new wife, Hindley becomes master of Wuthering Heights and continues to treat Heathcliff
cruelly.
One evening, Cathy and Heathcliff decide to go spy on their wealthy neighbours, the Lintons, at
Thrushcross Grange. However, the Lintons’ dogs attack them and Cathy’s foot is badly injured. She
remains there to recover and becomes friendly with the two Linton children, Isabella and Edgar.
The following summer, Hindley’s wife dies soon after giving birth to a son, Hareton. Heartbroken, Hindley
begins drinking heavily.
Cathy tells Nelly that Edgar Linton proposed to her. She explains that she really loves Heathcliff but won’t
marry him because he is poor. Overhearing this, Heathcliff runs away, causing Cathy to become ill. Soon
after, Edgar’s parents die. Edgar becomes master of Thrushcross Grange, and Cathy later agrees to marry
him. To her delight, Heathcliff returns six months after her marriage, looking like a gentleman, and goes to
live with Hindley at Wuthering Heights. There they gamble and play cards. Isabella, Edgar’s sister, falls in
love with Heathcliff and so Edgar forbids him to visit the house. Cathy becomes dangerously ill because
she can’t see Heathcliff, and it’s revealed that she’s expecting a child.
To Edgar’s disappointment, Isabella marries Heathcliff, but he treats her so badly that she runs away from
him and moves to London. There she has a baby whom she names Linton. Heathcliff manages to visit
Cathy one last time. That night, after giving birth to a little girl, she dies. Both Edgar and Heathcliff are
devastated. Edgar names his daughter Catherine.
Heathcliff becomes master of Wuthering Heights when Hindley dies. In London, Isabella also dies. Her son
is sent to Thrushcross Grange, but Heathcliff, having plans for Linton, immediately claims him. Years later,
Catherine meets Linton, and after being trapped at Wuthering Heights, she is forced to marry him. Once her
father dies, Catherine is brought to live with Linton at Wuthering Heights, but they are unhappy. Linton,
whose health has always been poor, soon dies. Catherine is left to live with Heathcliff and Hareton. This is
the situation Mr Lockwood finds at Wuthering Heights.
Months later, Heathcliff, behaving strangely, locks himself in his room where Nelly finds him dead the next
morning. The local people say he heard Cathy’s voice the night he died and that they’ve seen their ghosts
running on the moors at night. Catherine and Hareton fall in love and fix a date for their wedding.

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Wuthering Heights

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Emily Brontë was born in 1818 in Yorkshire, England, the fifth of six children. Two years later, the Brontë
family moved to the village of Haworth, to a large stone house on the wild moors. Emily’s father was a
vicar and also a writer. Reverend Brontë had an arts degree from Cambridge University and was anxious
that his children also have a good education. He brought tutors for them, and he himself enriched their
minds with stories and legends. He taught them how to debate, and they were familiar with the political
events and personalities of the times. From an early age, the Brontë children were encouraged to write, and
they wrote poems, stories and plays, all in tiny handwriting in order to save paper.
In 1842, encouraged by their father, Charlotte and Emily took the bold step of going abroad to Brussels.
They attended a school for girls kept by Mme Heger and her husband. He was a professor of rhetoric at the
local university and also taught the students at his private school. The two girls were very good students.
All subjects were taught in French, and they quickly learned the language. Other subjects were German,
music and drawing. Both Emily and Charlotte received an excellent education.
Charlotte remained in Brussels for some time, taking up the post of governess. Emily, not in good health,
returned to Haworth and devoted herself to writing. When Charlotte returned, she was impressed by the
quality of Emily’s poems. Anne, another sister who had remained at home, had also written some poems.
Charlotte added her poems and decided that the collection should be published. This was not easy. At that
time in England, women were not admitted to university, not allowed to vote and the majority of women
could not even read or write. The Brontë sisters knew that no one would publish a book with their own
names, so they offered their work under the male aliases of Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell, keeping only the
first initials of their names, Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë.
A year later, in 1847, the three sisters each succeeded in publishing their novels; Charlotte’s Jane Eyre,
Anne’s Agnes Grey and Emily’s only novel, Wuthering Heights. In the novels of the Brontë sisters, we see
the influence of their environment. Emily’s inspiration for Wuthering Heights undoubtedly came from the
bleak moors that surrounded their home, the isolated life, and the indomitable temperament of the people
who lived under such harsh conditions. We do not know if Emily’s passionate love story had its counterpart
in her short life or if it was the product of an educated mind and brilliant imagination. We can imagine that
the following lines, written by Emily, were the inspiration for the great love of Cathy and Heathcliff in
Wuthering Heights.
REMEMBRANCE
Cold in the earth and the deep snow piled about thee
Far, far removed, cold in the dreary grave!
Have I forgot, my only Love, to love thee,
Severed at last by Time’s all-severing wave?
When Emily died of tuberculosis at the age of 30, her sister Charlotte wrote of her, ‘Day by day, when I
saw with what a front she looked on suffering, I looked on her with an anguish of wonder and love. I have
seen nothing like it; but indeed, I have never seen her parallel in anything. Stronger than a man, simpler
than a child, her nature stood alone.’

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

• Life Expectancy: In the early 1800s, most of England was very unhealthy. There was no piped water,
and there were no sanitation installations. Refuse was thrown out of cottage doors and left to rot. It is
no wonder that people became ill and died young. At a public enquiry held in 1850, it was stated that
the average life expectancy was 26 years and over 40% of children died before the age of six.

• The Fame of the Brontës: Every year, thousands of visitors go to the village of Haworth and visit the
Brontës’ house where the sisters wrote and lived. There, tourists can walk around the village and over
the very moors that Emily wrote about in Wuthering Heights.

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Wuthering Heights

BEFORE READING

SUGGESTIONS FOR LEAD-IN ACTIVITIES

In pairs, students ask and answer the following questions. Alternatively, you can ask the questions and elicit
the answers from the whole class. (Some suggested answers are provided in italics.)
• What are the moors? (The moors are open areas of high land with poor soil which isn’t suitable for
farming. They’re mainly covered with grass or low bushes, and heather, a plant with small flowers that
grows wild on the moorlands. These plants don’t provide much protection from the fierce and bitter-
cold winds that blow over the moors.)
• How do you think the isolation affects the people who live on the moors? Do you think that the
location influenced the characters in the story? (People who live in isolated areas have to rely on
themselves and the few people around them. Isolation means being far from a town, a market or a
doctor. Before television or radio was invented, people had to create their own entertainment.)
• Why do you think people died young in the period during which the story took place? (unsanitary
conditions, malnutrition, etc.) Which diseases were prevalent at that time? (bronchitis, pneumonia, etc.)
Are they prevalent today? (Yes, in war zones, Third World countries, etc.) If not, why not? (Fatal
diseases are less prevalent in developed countries with modern equipment, medicine and improved
sanitary conditions.)

K E Y V O C A B U L A RY

1. Pre-teach the words in bold. They are presented in context for your convenience. You could also use the
passages as a dictation for your students.
A. When a black-haired gypsy boy is adopted by a kind man, it brings trouble to everyone. The
man’s wife is angry with him and thinks that her husband is foolish. The man’s son hates the boy
and thinks he is useless. Even the man’s ill-tempered servant curses the boy. Only his young
daughter accepts the boy into their home as a friend.
B. The boy was a good worker but very moody, for he noticed the cold atmosphere around him.
When the old man died, the boy was heartbroken. He realised that he was an orphan again.
2. In A, the bolded words are adjectives. Ask the students to write their opposites. In B, ask the students to
write sentences with the words in bold.

BEFORE READING ACTIVITIES

The Before Reading Activities in the Burlington Reader Series general information leaflet, pages
8-11, can be applied to Wuthering Heights.
In addition to the activities in the general leaflet, students can then answer the following questions.
1. Look at the picture on the front cover of the reader and the picture on page 35. Can you predict
something about the character of the girl? (wild, independent nature, etc.)
2. Describe the scene and atmosphere on page 11. (A traveller is walking towards an isolated house. It is
dark and windy, and it is snowing. The atmosphere is strange and mysterious.) What do you expect will
happen next?
3. Look at the family tree on pages 6 and 7. How many families are involved in the story? How many
generations? (two families, three generations)
4. Look at the picture on page 21. What kind of expressions do the people have on their faces? (shock,
anger, etc.)

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Wuthering Heights

AFTER READING: EXTRA CHALLENGES

MAKE YOUR STUDENTS THINK


Here are some points that more advanced students can be asked to consider after reading the book.
1. What was Heathcliff’s revenge for Hindley’s cruelty to him?
2. Compare Cathy’s love for Heathcliff with her love for Edgar.
3. Nelly Dean is the narrator of the novel, and she also plays an important role in the story. Give examples
to show how she helps the main characters.
4. In your opinion, is Heathcliff a villain or a hero? Why?
5. Would you call this novel a tragic story? Why? / Why not?
6. Cathy tells Nelly that she can’t marry Heathcliff because he’s poor. Do you think this was the only
reason, or were there other factors involved? Explain your answer.

DRAMA ACTIVITIES AND PROJECT SUGGESTIONS


1. Write the letter that Mr Lockwood sends to a friend after he comes to live in Thrushcross Grange.
Describe the area and your neighbours (at Wuthering Heights).
2. Work with a partner. Act out the conversation between Mr and Mrs Earnshaw the morning after
Heathcliff is brought to Wuthering Heights.
3. Imagine that you are Cathy. You are staying at Thrushcross Grange after the dogs have bitten you.
Write a letter to Nelly Dean, telling her about the Linton family.
4. Choose two female characters: Isabella / Cathy, Cathy / Catherine, etc. and write a paragraph
comparing them.
5. Work with a partner. Student A is Heathcliff. Student B is a journalist who works for a local
newspaper. Your paper has asked you to interview Heathcliff after he becomes the master of
Wuthering Heights. Ask Heathcliff to describe his feelings. Act out the interview for the class.
6. Imagine you are Isabella living in London. Write a letter to Edgar describing your life there as a single
mother raising a young child.
7. Imagine you are Heathcliff. Make a speech to the class in which you try to justify the way you acted
towards the other people in the story.
8. Write the entry in Catherine’s diary in which she discusses her developing friendship with Hareton
after being forced to live at Wuthering Heights.
9. Wuthering Heights is set in the Yorkshire moors. Using an encyclopedia or the Internet to help you,
write a paragraph about the Yorkshire moors.
10. It is unusual to find three sisters who are all authors. Using an encyclopedia or the Internet to help
you, write a paragraph about the three Brontë sisters, Emily, Charlotte and Anne.

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Wuthering Heights

AFTER READING: GROUP WORK

TO THE TEACHER:
1. Hand out some of the following statements to the groups.
2. The groups discuss the statements and decide whether they are true (T) or false (F) and give reasons for
their answers.
3. The group spokesperson reports the group’s ideas to the whole class.

TO THE STUDENTS:
Discuss the following statements. Decide if each is true (T) or false (F). Support your opinions with
observations and details from the story.

Statement T/F Examples to support our opinion

1. When Mr Earnshaw brought Heathcliff into


his family, things changed for the worse.
2. Edgar hated his sister, Isabella.
3. Once Hindley’s wife died, he was a changed man.
4. Nelly Dean is the central character in the book.
5. Edgar admired Heathcliff.
6. When Isabella and Heathcliff married,
Cathy was pleased.

7. Catherine and Linton were an unhappy couple.


8. Heathcliff believed in ghosts.
9. Joseph plays an important part in the story.

See the Burlington Reader Series general information leaflet, pages 13-15, for more After Reading
activities.

7
Group Work

POSSIBLE ANSWERS

1. When Mr Earnshaw brought Heathcliff into his 7. Catherine and Linton were an unhappy couple.
family, things changed for the worse. True. They were married against her wishes,
True. From the moment Heathcliff entered the and the union was unsuccessful from the
family, there was trouble. Hindley hated start.
him from the start and shortly after, Mrs
Earnshaw died. Heathcliff did not respect 8. Heathcliff believed in ghosts.
his neighbour, Edgar Linton, and True. When Mr Lockwood spent the night at
interfered in his marriage to Cathy. He Wuthering Heights, he said he saw a
also married Isabella and made her young woman, a ghost. Heathcliff called
miserable. to her and asked her to return to him.

2. Edgar hated his sister, Isabella. 9. Joseph plays an important part in the story.
False. Edgar loved his sister and took care of False. He is not a central character, but he
her. He was only angry at her for running contributes to the atmosphere. Although
away with Heathcliff and for marrying he is a servant, he is outspoken. For
him. instance, when Mr Earnshaw first brings
Heathcliff to the house, it is Joseph who
3. Once Hindley’s wife died, he was a changed says, “He’s as dark as if he came from
man. the devil!”
True. Hindley was heartbroken and he began to
drink heavily. Because of this, he gambled
and lost his money and his estate. He died
a poor man. He was not a good father to
his son, whom he wrongly blamed for his
wife’s death.

4. Nelly Dean is the central character in the book.


False. Nelly is the narrator of the story but not
the central character. She plays an
important part as the go-between in the
relationships of Cathy and Heathcliff,
Isabella and Edgar, and Catherine and
Linton. She moves from one scene to the
other and also makes objective comments
from time to time.

5. Edgar admired Heathcliff.


False. Edgar disliked Heathcliff intensely. He
saw that he was a threat to his marriage
with Cathy and a danger to his sister
Isabella.

6. When Isabella and Heathcliff married, Cathy


was pleased.
False. Cathy knew that Heathcliff did not marry
Isabella because he loved her, but to get
revenge on the Lintons. Perhaps too, she
was jealous, for she loved Heathcliff.

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Wuthering Heights

WORKSHEET 1: CHAPTERS 1-8

A. Circle the word in column II, III or IV that has the same meaning as the word in column I.
I II III IV
1. attempted tested tried advised
2. realised proved missed understood
3. ill-humoured sick bad-tempered foolish
4. rushed ran spoke fell
5. on her own in her mind in her room by herself
6. cheerful upset happy moody

B. In each of the following sentences, fill in one blank with the name of a character from the list.
Then fill in the other blank with the correct word from column I above.

Joseph Cathy Mr Lockwood Nelly Dean Zillah Heathcliff

1. ............................... , who narrates the story, is usually a ............................... woman.


2. Although the atmosphere was unfriendly when ............................... visited Wuthering Heights, he
............................... to make conversation.
3. When the dogs growled at Mr Lockwood, ............................... heard them and ...............................
into the room.
4. ............................... , who is always reading the Bible, is an ............................... man.
5. When Cathy ............................... that ............................... had left Wuthering Heights, she was very
upset and became ill.
6. ............................... doesn’t listen to Nelly or her husband. She decides things ............................... .

C. Complete the passage using the correct form of the verbs from the list.

remain not use become not think not happen


visit think light not snow stay

Heathcliff’s servant Zillah took Mr Lockwood upstairs to a room that 1. ............................... in the
house, warning him to be quiet. She 2. ............................... a candle and left him. Mr Lockwood
3. ............................... to himself, “If I 4. ............................... at home, this 5. ............................... . It
6. ...................................... when I left Thrushcross Grange. Why didn’t I listen to my housekeeper and
7. ............................... at home? I 8. ............................... that I 9. ............................... this miserable
house again. I am sorry because I thought that Mr Heathcliff and I 10. ............................... friendly
neighbours.”

D. Choose the correct word in each sentence.


1. Wuthering Heights is situated in an (ill-humoured / upset / isolated) part of the Yorkshire moors.
2. Mr Lockwood is the (landlord / owner / tenant) at Thrushcross Grange.
3. Cathy and Heathcliff (nursed / mourned / noticed) Mr Earnshaw’s death.
4. Cathy is ruled by her (emotions / behaviour / mercy).
5. Hindley and Heathcliff are (occasionally / never / always) on good terms with each other.
6. Heathcliff has a more (balanced / passionate / thankful) nature than Edgar.

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Worksheet 1: Chapters 1-8

ANSWERS

A. 1. tried
2. understood
3. bad-tempered
4. ran
5. by herself
6. happy

B. 1. Nelly Dean / cheerful


2. Mr Lockwood / attempted
3. Zillah / rushed
4. Joseph / ill-humoured
5. realised / Heathcliff
6. Cathy / on her own

C. 1. was not (wasn’t) used


2. lit
3. thought
4. had stayed / had remained
5. would not (wouldn’t) have happened
6. was not (wasn’t) snowing
7. stay / remain
8. do not (don’t) think
9. will visit
10. would become / could have become

D. 1. isolated
2. tenant
3. mourned
4. emotions
5. never
6. passionate

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Wuthering Heights

WORKSHEET 2: CHAPTERS 9-EPILOGUE

A. Fill in the blanks with the correct noun, adjective or adverb.

Noun Adjective Adverb


1. madness ............................... ...............................
2. ............................... ............................... truly / truthfully
3. ice ............................... ...............................
4. ............................... ............................... safely
5. ............................... scornful ...............................
6. ............................... ............................... wishfully

B. Use the correct words from the table above to complete the following sentences.
1. Isabella thought that Heathcliff would be good and kind to her. However, the ...............................
was very different.
2. When Nelly touched Heathcliff’s hand, it was ............................... .
3. Heathcliff loved Cathy ............................... and passionately.
4. Heathcliff often spoke ............................... to those around him.
5. It was Heathcliff’s ............................... that Catherine and Linton marry.
6. Edgar knew it wasn’t ............................... to leave his daughter alone without Nelly.

C. Fill in the correct preposition: in, on, to, at, after or into.
Nelly told Heathcliff that he could come to see Cathy 1. ............................... Sunday,
2. ............................... Edgar and the servants had gone 3. ............................... church. When Heathcliff
saw Cathy, he couldn’t look 4. ............................... her eyes. “Will you be happy when I am
5. ............................... my grave?” she asked. “Don’t be cruel 6. ............................... me!” Heathcliff
cried. “While you are 7. ............................... peace, I’ll be 8. ............................... Hell.”

D. Change the following sentences from Direct to Indirect Speech.


1. “I called Dr Kenneth and he came straight away,” Mr Linton told Hindley.
Mr Linton told Hindley that .................................................................................................................
2. “I’m in love with Heathcliff!” Isabella said.
Isabella told Cathy that .........................................................................................................................
3. “Heathcliff cannot enter my house,” Edgar said.
Edgar told Cathy that ............................................................................................................................
4. “Will you give up Heathcliff or do you want to lose me?” Edgar asked.
Edgar asked Cathy ................................................................................................................................
5. “You’re ill,” Nelly said, “and you must eat.”
Nelly told Cathy that ............................................................................................................................
6. “Isabella and Heathcliff drove through Gimmerton this morning,” said Nelly.
Nelly told Edgar that ............................................................................................................................

11
Worksheet 2: Chapters 9-Epilogue

ANSWERS

A. Noun Adjective Adverb


1. madness mad madly
2. truth true / truthful truly / truthfully
3. ice icy icily
4. safety safe safely
5. scorn scornful scornfully
6. wish wishful wishfully

B. 1. truth
2. icy
3. madly
4. scornfully
5. wish
6. safe

C. 1. on
2. after
3. to
4. into
5. in
6. to
7. at
8. in

D. 1. Mr Linton told Hindley that he had called Dr Kenneth and that he had come straight away.
2. Isabella told Cathy that she was in love with Heathcliff.
3. Edgar told Cathy that Heathcliff could not enter his house.
4. Edgar asked Cathy if she would give up Heathcliff or if she wanted to lose him.
5. Nelly told Cathy that she was ill and that she had to eat.
6. Nelly told Edgar that Isabella and Heathcliff had driven through Gimmerton that morning.

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Wuthering Heights

FINAL TEST

A. Choose the correct answer.


1. When Mr Lockwood visited Wuthering 6. When Cathy realised that Heathcliff had gone,
Heights the second time, a. she was angry with Joseph and Nelly.
a. Joseph welcomed him. b. she cried and became very ill.
b. Nelly welcomed him. c. she didn’t care.
c. Hareton and Catherine were happy to d. she told Nelly that she really loved Edgar.
see him. 7. Isabella wanted to marry Heathcliff because
d. he was not given a warm welcome. a. she was in love with him.
2. Mr Lockwood could not return home that b. he lived at Wuthering Heights.
night, because c. she wanted to live in London.
a. the moors were covered in deep snow. d. he was a gypsy.
b. he was too tired to walk home. 8. Edgar hit Heathcliff because
c. Heathcliff wanted to talk to him. a. Heathcliff insulted him.
d. he felt ill. b. Heathcliff wanted to marry Isabella.
3. When Heathcliff was a child, Joseph, the c. Heathcliff was a gypsy.
servant, treated him d. no one knew who Heathcliff’s parents were.
a. the way he treated everyone. 9. Heathcliff wanted Catherine and Linton to
b. like a gentleman. a. go and live in London.
c. cruelly. b. write letters to each other.
d. kindly by giving him advice. c. get married.
4. Hindley was sent to a boarding school d. live at Thrushcross Grange.
because 10. After Heathcliff died, the local people said
a. he wasn’t learning enough. a. that he was Mr Earnshaw’s son.
b. he didn’t like working on the farm. b. that he loved Cathy with all his heart.
c. he was jealous of his sister. c. that they had seen his ghost and Cathy’s
d. he and Heathcliff were always fighting. running on the moors.
5. After Heathcliff overheard Cathy talking to d. that he was a gentleman.
Nelly,
a. he sat down and listened.
b. he liked what he heard.
c. he left Wuthering Heights.
d. he was not surprised.
40 points (4 points each)

B. Choose the correct answer.


The Earnshaw family (1. had lived / was lived) at Wuthering Heights for generations. When Mr
Lockwood arrived (2. at / to) Thrushcross Grange, he wanted to get to know his neighbours. He
(3. began / set out) early, walking over the moors (4. towards / at) Wuthering Heights. On his arrival,
he (5. knocked / knocked on) the door. The people (6. don’t receive / didn’t receive) him warmly,
and the atmosphere was cold. He soon realised that they were not (7. interesting / interested) in
meeting new (8. persons / people). On his way home, he (9. felt / feel) that the visit (10. was been /
had been) useless.
30 points (3 points each)

C. Choose one topic and write a paragraph. Your paragraph should be at least 80 words long.
1. Compare the characters of Heathcliff and Edgar.
2. Write about the relationship between Cathy and Heathcliff.
3. Did you like this story? If so, why? If not, why not?
30 points

13
Final Test

ANSWERS

A. 1. d 3. c 5. c 7. a 9. c
2. a 4. a 6. b 8. a 10. c

B. 1. had lived 6. didn’t receive


2. at 7. interested
3. set out 8. people
4. towards 9. felt
5. knocked on 10. had been

C. Accept all logical and grammatically correct answers.


Possible points for inclusion:
1. Heathcliff was afraid of no one. He stood up to Hindley and didn’t complain when Joseph beat him.
He was also a man of principle and deep pride. When Cathy told Nelly that she could never marry
Heathcliff because he was poor, he ran away.
Edgar is a more fearful man and a weak one. He stands up to Heathcliff, but he doesn’t have the
power to stop him. Heathcliff even calls him a coward. Yet Edgar has a kind heart and is a caring
person. He loves Cathy and his attitude to his daughter, Catherine, is a protective, loving one.
These two characters, Heathcliff and Edgar have opposite natures. Heathcliff is emotional and
passionate whereas Edgar is more reasonable and moderate. Because of their contrasting
personalities and their love for Cathy, they were bound to clash.
2. While they were growing up, Cathy and Heathcliff developed a strong friendship and a deep love.
There was also a sense of solidarity; Cathy and Heathcliff against Hindley and Joseph. But Cathy
refused to marry Heathcliff because he was poor. The relationship changes when Heathcliff returns,
looking like a gentleman, and finds that Cathy is married to the wealthy Edgar Linton. Heathcliff
feels that Cathy has betrayed him by marrying someone else. The obsessive love Heathcliff and
Cathy have for one another is intense and dramatic, and perhaps it is this love that destroys them
both in the end. It is also a love that survives death, a love that extends beyond the grave.

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Wuthering Heights

ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS IN THE READER

These answers relate to the questions on pages 73-75 of the reader itself.
Chapter 1 Chapter 7
1. In order to meet his landlord who was also his 1. Frances, Hareton’s mother, died and Hindley,
nearest neighbour. Mr Lockwood was hoping his father, was devastated. He began drinking
they might become friends. and was often violent.
2. Mr Heathcliff was a handsome gentleman with 2. Cathy confessed that she loved Heathcliff but
a dark complexion. He seemed intelligent but that she would marry Edgar Linton to be a rich
was also very rude and unfriendly. lady.
Chapter 2 3. Heathcliff went away and nobody saw him for
a long time.
1. A young man called Hareton Earnshaw and a 4. Cathy went out in the rain to look for him and
young woman who was Heathcliff’s daughter- became dangerously ill.
in-law.
2. Heathcliff was very rude and acted as if he Chapter 8
hated them. 1. Cathy was taken to the Linton’s house,
Chapter 3 Thrushcross Grange.
2. Cathy and Edgar Linton were married.
1. Because it was too dark to find his way and the 3. Heathcliff appeared six months later.
moors were covered in deep snow. Mr 4. Cathy was very happy. Edgar called Heathcliff
Lockwood was afraid he’d get lost. a gypsy but reluctantly allowed Cathy to
2. Mr Lockwood heard strange noises outside, receive him.
and when he opened the window, a strange
young woman grabbed his hand and asked him Chapter 9
to let her in. He was terrified. 1. That she was in love with Heathcliff.
3. It was frightening. Heathcliff’s face was white 2. Cathy warned Isabella that Heathcliff was
and his hand trembled. He was full of anger cruel and Nelly told her to forget him.
and pain and told Mr Lockwood to leave that
Chapter 10
room at once.
1. At first, Heathcliff didn’t take Edgar seriously,
Chapter 4
but after the situation became violent, he
1. Nelly Dean was Mr Lockwood’s housekeeper. forced the door open and left.
She had formerly worked in Wuthering Heights 2. Cathy locked herself in her room. She refused
as a servant. to eat and became very ill.
2. Joseph thought the boy came from the devil. 3. Isabella had run away with Heathcliff to
He kicked him down the stairs and threw him Gimmerton.
into the stable.
Chapter 11
Chapter 5
1. That Nelly and Cathy were right about
1. To study at a boarding school. Heathcliff and that she was very unhappy. She
2. Mr Earnshaw died and Hindley returned home begged Nelly to visit her.
with his wife, Frances. 2. He asked Nelly to help him see Cathy.
3. Hindley hated Heathcliff more than ever. 3. Cathy’s expression was one of pure joy. She
4. Cathy was bitten by dogs when she and held him tight and refused to let him leave.
Heathcliff were looking into the Linton’s 4. Cathy gave birth to a baby girl, but her own
sitting-room. condition got worse and she died two hours
Chapter 6 later.
5. Isabella was wet and dirty, her hair was
1. Cathy was transformed into a lady. uncombed and she had blood on her face.
2. Because Edgar insulted him. 6. Isabella went to Gimmerton and then to
3. That one day he would get his revenge on London, and five months later, she gave birth
Hindley. to a boy.

15
Wuthering Heights

Chapter 12
1. Isabella, Linton’s mother, had died.
2. Linton only stayed a night at Thrushcross
Grange because his father, Heathcliff, wanted
the boy to be with him at Wuthering Heights.
3. Linton was the heir of Thrushcross Grange and
he would inherit it when Edgar Linton died.
Chapter 13
1. Heathcliff wanted Linton and Catherine to fall
in love and get married so that they would both
be the owners of the Grange.
2. Linton was sickly, unable to walk long
distances. He had a poetic and romantic nature -
writing love letters to Catherine.
3. Catherine met another cousin, Hareton.
4. No. Linton continued writing love letters to
Catherine.
Chapter 14
1. Heathcliff told Catherine to go there and
comfort young Linton who was dying from a
broken heart.
2. Heathcliff took them all to Wuthering Heights
and forced Catherine to marry Linton.
3. After Edgar’s death, Heathcliff wanted
Catherine to look after her husband at
Wuthering Heights and made Nelly stay to take
care of the Grange.
4. Linton was a sick man and died a few months
later.
Epilogue
1. Mr Lockwood was away for three months, and
when he returned, another housekeeper was at
the Grange. She told him Nelly was living at
Wuthering Heights, so he went to visit her.
2. Heathcliff had died.
3. Heathcliff had kept Catherine at Wuthering
Heights like a prisoner. She had no one to talk to
except for Hareton. Slowly, they began to get
closer and she offered to teach Hareton to read
and write.
4. The local people said Heathcliff had heard
Cathy’s voice and tried to let her in through the
window. They also said they’d seen the ghosts
of Heathcliff and Cathy running on the moors at
night.

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