On the morning of a fine June day
my first bonny little nursling, and the last of the
ancient Earnshaw stock, was born. We were busy
with the hay in a far-away field, when the girl that
usually brought our breakfasts came running an hour
too soon across the meadow and up the lane, calling
me as she ran.
‘Oh, such a grand bairn!’
she panted out. ’The finest lad that ever
breathed! But the doctor says missis must go:
he says she’s been in a consumption these many
months. I heard him tell Mr. Hindley: and
now she has nothing to keep her, and she’ll
be dead before winter. You must come home directly.
You’re to nurse it, Nelly: to feed it with
sugar and milk, and take care of it day and night.
I wish I were you, because it will be all yours when
there is no missis!’
‘But is she very ill?’
I asked, flinging down my rake and tying my bonnet.
‘I guess she is; yet she looks
bravely,’ replied the girl, ’and she talks
as if she thought of living to see it grow a man.
She’s out of her head for joy, it’s such
a beauty! If I were her I’m certain I should
not die: I should get better at the bare sight
of it, in spite of Kenneth. I was fairly mad
at him. Dame Archer brought the cherub down to
master, in the house, and his face just began to light
up, when the old croaker steps forward, and says he “Earnshaw,
it’s a blessing your wife has been spared to
leave you this son. When she came, I felt convinced
we shouldn’t keep her long; and now, I must
tell you, the winter will probably finish her.
Don’t take on, and fret about it too much:
it can’t be helped. And besides, you should
have known better than to choose such a rush of a
lass!"’
‘And what did the master answer?’ I inquired.
’I think he swore: but
I didn’t mind him, I was straining to see the
bairn,’ and she began again to describe it rapturously.
I, as zealous as herself, hurried eagerly home to
admire, on my part; though I was very sad for Hindley’s
sake. He had room in his heart only for two idols his
wife and himself: he doted on both, and adored
one, and I couldn’t conceive how he would bear
the loss.
When we got to Wuthering Heights,
there he stood at the front door; and, as I passed
in, I asked, ‘how was the baby?’
‘Nearly ready to run about,
Nell!’ he replied, putting on a cheerful smile.
‘And the mistress?’ I
ventured to inquire; ‘the doctor says she’s ’
‘Damn the doctor!’ he
interrupted, reddening. ’Frances is quite
right: she’ll be perfectly well by this
time next week. Are you going up-stairs? will
you tell her that I’ll come, if she’ll
promise not to talk. I left her because she
would not hold her tongue; and she must tell
her Mr. Kenneth says she must be quiet.’
I delivered this message to Mrs. Earnshaw;
she seemed in flighty spirits, and replied merrily,
’I hardly spoke a word, Ellen, and there he has
gone out twice, crying. Well, say I promise
I won’t speak: but that does not bind me
not to laugh at him!’
Poor soul! Till within a week
of her death that gay heart never failed her; and
her husband persisted doggedly, nay, furiously, in
affirming her health improved every day. When
Kenneth warned him that his medicines were useless
at that stage of the malady, and he needn’t put
him to further expense by attending her, he retorted,
’I know you need not she’s
well she does not want any more attendance
from you! She never was in a consumption.
It was a fever; and it is gone: her pulse is
as slow as mine now, and her cheek as cool.’
He told his wife the same story, and
she seemed to believe him; but one night, while leaning
on his shoulder, in the act of saying she thought
she should be able to get up to-morrow, a fit of coughing
took her a very slight one he
raised her in his arms; she put her two hands about
his neck, her face changed, and she was dead.
As the girl had anticipated, the child
Hareton fell wholly into my hands. Mr. Earnshaw,
provided he saw him healthy and never heard him cry,
was contented, as far as regarded him. For himself,
he grew desperate: his sorrow was of that kind
that will not lament. He neither wept nor prayed;
he cursed and defied: execrated God and man, and
gave himself up to reckless dissipation. The
servants could not bear his tyrannical and evil conduct
long: Joseph and I were the only two that would
stay. I had not the heart to leave my charge;
and besides, you know, I had been his foster-sister,
and excused his behaviour more readily than a stranger
would. Joseph remained to hector over tenants
and labourers; and because it was his vocation to
be where he had plenty of wickedness to reprove.
The master’s bad ways and bad
companions formed a pretty example for Catherine and
Heathcliff. His treatment of the latter was enough
to make a fiend of a saint. And, truly, it appeared
as if the lad were possessed of something diabolical
at that period. He delighted to witness Hindley
degrading himself past redemption; and became daily
more notable for savage sullenness and ferocity.
I could not half tell what an infernal house we had.
The curate dropped calling, and nobody decent came
near us, at last; unless Edgar Linton’s visits
to Miss Cathy might be an exception. At fifteen
she was the queen of the country-side; she had no
peer; and she did turn out a haughty, headstrong creature!
I own I did not like her, after infancy was past;
and I vexed her frequently by trying to bring down
her arrogance: she never took an aversion to me,
though. She had a wondrous constancy to old attachments:
even Heathcliff kept his hold on her affections unalterably;
and young Linton, with all his superiority, found
it difficult to make an equally deep impression.
He was my late master: that is his portrait over
the fireplace. It used to hang on one side,
and his wife’s on the other; but hers has been
removed, or else you might see something of what she
was. Can you make that out?
Mrs. Dean raised the candle, and I
discerned a soft-featured face, exceedingly resembling
the young lady at the Heights, but more pensive and
amiable in expression. It formed a sweet picture.
The long light hair curled slightly on the temples;
the eyes were large and serious; the figure almost
too graceful. I did not marvel how Catherine
Earnshaw could forget her first friend for such an
individual. I marvelled much how he, with a
mind to correspond with his person, could fancy my
idea of Catherine Earnshaw.
‘A very agreeable portrait,’
I observed to the house-keeper. ’Is it
like?’
‘Yes,’ she answered; ’but
he looked better when he was animated; that is his
everyday countenance: he wanted spirit in general.’
Catherine had kept up her acquaintance
with the Lintons since her five-weeks’ residence
among them; and as she had no temptation to show her
rough side in their company, and had the sense to be
ashamed of being rude where she experienced such invariable
courtesy, she imposed unwittingly on the old lady
and gentleman by her ingenious cordiality; gained
the admiration of Isabella, and the heart and soul
of her brother: acquisitions that flattered her
from the first for she was full of ambition and
led her to adopt a double character without exactly
intending to deceive any one. In the place where
she heard Heathcliff termed a ‘vulgar young
ruffian,’ and ‘worse than a brute,’
she took care not to act like him; but at home she
had small inclination to practise politeness that
would only be laughed at, and restrain an unruly nature
when it would bring her neither credit nor praise.
Mr. Edgar seldom mustered courage
to visit Wuthering Heights openly. He had a
terror of Earnshaw’s reputation, and shrunk from
encountering him; and yet he was always received with
our best attempts at civility: the master himself
avoided offending him, knowing why he came; and if
he could not be gracious, kept out of the way.
I rather think his appearance there was distasteful
to Catherine; she was not artful, never played the
coquette, and had evidently an objection to her two
friends meeting at all; for when Heathcliff expressed
contempt of Linton in his presence, she could not
half coincide, as she did in his absence; and when
Linton evinced disgust and antipathy to Heathcliff,
she dared not treat his sentiments with indifference,
as if depreciation of her playmate were of scarcely
any consequence to her. I’ve had many a
laugh at her perplexities and untold troubles, which
she vainly strove to hide from my mockery. That
sounds ill-natured: but she was so proud it became
really impossible to pity her distresses, till she
should be chastened into more humility. She
did bring herself, finally, to confess, and to confide
in me: there was not a soul else that she might
fashion into an adviser.
Mr. Hindley had gone from home one
afternoon, and Heathcliff presumed to give himself
a holiday on the strength of it. He had reached
the age of sixteen then, I think, and without having
bad features, or being deficient in intellect, he
contrived to convey an impression of inward and outward
repulsiveness that his present aspect retains no traces
of. In the first place, he had by that time lost
the benefit of his early education: continual
hard work, begun soon and concluded late, had extinguished
any curiosity he once possessed in pursuit of knowledge,
and any love for books or learning. His childhood’s
sense of superiority, instilled into him by the favours
of old Mr. Earnshaw, was faded away. He struggled
long to keep up an equality with Catherine in her studies,
and yielded with poignant though silent regret:
but he yielded completely; and there was no prevailing
on him to take a step in the way of moving upward,
when he found he must, necessarily, sink beneath his
former level. Then personal appearance sympathised
with mental deterioration: he acquired a slouching
gait and ignoble look; his naturally reserved disposition
was exaggerated into an almost idiotic excess of unsociable
moroseness; and he took a grim pleasure, apparently,
in exciting the aversion rather than the esteem of
his few acquaintance.
Catherine and he were constant companions
still at his seasons of respite from labour; but he
had ceased to express his fondness for her in words,
and recoiled with angry suspicion from her girlish
caresses, as if conscious there could be no gratification
in lavishing such marks of affection on him.
On the before-named occasion he came into the house
to announce his intention of doing nothing, while
I was assisting Miss Cathy to arrange her dress:
she had not reckoned on his taking it into his head
to be idle; and imagining she would have the whole
place to herself, she managed, by some means, to inform
Mr. Edgar of her brother’s absence, and was
then preparing to receive him.
‘Cathy, are you busy this afternoon?’
asked Heathcliff. ’Are you going anywhere?’
‘No, it is raining,’ she answered.
‘Why have you that silk frock
on, then?’ he said. ’Nobody coming
here, I hope?’
‘Not that I know of,’
stammered Miss: ’but you should be in the
field now, Heathcliff. It is an hour past dinnertime:
I thought you were gone.’
‘Hindley does not often free
us from his accursed presence,’ observed the
boy. ‘I’ll not work any more to-day:
I’ll stay with you.’
‘Oh, but Joseph will tell,’
she suggested; ‘you’d better go!’
’Joseph is loading lime on the
further side of Penistone Crags; it will take him
till dark, and he’ll never know.’
So, saying, he lounged to the fire,
and sat down. Catherine reflected an instant,
with knitted brows she found it needful
to smooth the way for an intrusion. ’Isabella
and Edgar Linton talked of calling this afternoon,’
she said, at the conclusion of a minute’s silence.
’As it rains, I hardly expect them; but they
may come, and if they do, you run the risk of being
scolded for no good.’
‘Order Ellen to say you are
engaged, Cathy,’ he persisted; ’don’t
turn me out for those pitiful, silly friends of yours!
I’m on the point, sometimes, of complaining
that they but I’ll not ’
‘That they what?’ cried
Catherine, gazing at him with a troubled countenance.
‘Oh, Nelly!’ she added petulantly, jerking
her head away from my hands, ’you’ve combed
my hair quite out of curl! That’s enough;
let me alone. What are you on the point of complaining
about, Heathcliff?’
‘Nothing only look
at the almanack on that wall;’ he pointed to
a framed sheet hanging near the window, and continued,
’The crosses are for the evenings you have spent
with the Lintons, the dots for those spent with me.
Do you see? I’ve marked every day.’
‘Yes very foolish:
as if I took notice!’ replied Catherine, in a
peevish tone. ‘And where is the sense
of that?’
‘To show that I do take notice,’
said Heathcliff.
‘And should I always be sitting
with you?’ she demanded, growing more irritated.
’What good do I get? What do you talk
about? You might be dumb, or a baby, for anything
you say to amuse me, or for anything you do, either!’
’You never told me before that
I talked too little, or that you disliked my company,
Cathy!’ exclaimed Heathcliff, in much agitation.
‘It’s no company at all,
when people know nothing and say nothing,’ she
muttered.
Her companion rose up, but he hadn’t
time to express his feelings further, for a horse’s
feet were heard on the flags, and having knocked gently,
young Linton entered, his face brilliant with delight
at the unexpected summon she had received. Doubtless
Catherine marked the difference between her friends,
as one came in and the other went out. The contrast
resembled what you see in exchanging a bleak, hilly,
coal country for a beautiful fertile valley; and his
voice and greeting were as opposite as his aspect.
He had a sweet, low manner of speaking, and pronounced
his words as you do: that’s less gruff than
we talk here, and softer.
‘I’m not come too soon,
am I?’ he said, casting a look at me: I
had begun to wipe the plate, and tidy some drawers
at the far end in the dresser.
‘No,’ answered Catherine.
‘What are you doing there, Nelly?’
‘My work, Miss,’ I replied.
(Mr. Hindley had given me directions to make a third
party in any private visits Linton chose to pay.)
She stepped behind me and whispered
crossly, ’Take yourself and your dusters off;
when company are in the house, servants don’t
commence scouring and cleaning in the room where they
are!’
‘It’s a good opportunity,
now that master is away,’ I answered aloud:
’he hates me to be fidgeting over these things
in his presence. I’m sure Mr. Edgar will
excuse me.’
‘I hate you to be fidgeting
in my presence,’ exclaimed the young lady
imperiously, not allowing her guest time to speak:
she had failed to recover her equanimity since the
little dispute with Heathcliff.
‘I’m sorry for it, Miss
Catherine,’ was my response; and I proceeded
assiduously with my occupation.
She, supposing Edgar could not see
her, snatched the cloth from my hand, and pinched
me, with a prolonged wrench, very spitefully on the
arm. I’ve said I did not love her, and
rather relished mortifying her vanity now and then:
besides, she hurt me extremely; so I started up from
my knees, and screamed out, ’Oh, Miss, that’s
a nasty trick! You have no right to nip me,
and I’m not going to bear it.’
‘I didn’t touch you, you
lying creature!’ cried she, her fingers tingling
to repeat the act, and her ears red with rage.
She never had power to conceal her passion, it always
set her whole complexion in a blaze.
‘What’s that, then?’
I retorted, showing a decided purple witness to refute
her.
She stamped her foot, wavered a moment,
and then, irresistibly impelled by the naughty spirit
within her, slapped me on the cheek: a stinging
blow that filled both eyes with water.
‘Catherine, love! Catherine!’
interposed Linton, greatly shocked at the double fault
of falsehood and violence which his idol had committed.
‘Leave the room, Ellen!’ she repeated,
trembling all over.
Little Hareton, who followed me everywhere,
and was sitting near me on the floor, at seeing my
tears commenced crying himself, and sobbed out complaints
against ‘wicked aunt Cathy,’ which drew
her fury on to his unlucky head: she seized his
shoulders, and shook him till the poor child waxed
livid, and Edgar thoughtlessly laid hold of her hands
to deliver him. In an instant one was wrung
free, and the astonished young man felt it applied
over his own ear in a way that could not be mistaken
for jest. He drew back in consternation.
I lifted Hareton in my arms, and walked off to the
kitchen with him, leaving the door of communication
open, for I was curious to watch how they would settle
their disagreement. The insulted visitor moved
to the spot where he had laid his hat, pale and with
a quivering lip.
‘That’s right!’
I said to myself. ’Take warning and begone!
It’s a kindness to let you have a glimpse of
her genuine disposition.’
‘Where are you going?’
demanded Catherine, advancing to the door.
He swerved aside, and attempted to pass.
‘You must not go!’ she exclaimed, energetically.
‘I must and shall!’ he replied in a subdued
voice.
‘No,’ she persisted, grasping
the handle; ’not yet, Edgar Linton: sit
down; you shall not leave me in that temper.
I should be miserable all night, and I won’t
be miserable for you!’
‘Can I stay after you have struck me?’
asked Linton.
Catherine was mute.
‘You’ve made me afraid
and ashamed of you,’ he continued; ’I’ll
not come here again!’
Her eyes began to glisten and her lids to twinkle.
‘And you told a deliberate untruth!’ he
said.
‘I didn’t!’ she
cried, recovering her speech; ’I did nothing
deliberately. Well, go, if you please get
away! And now I’ll cry I’ll
cry myself sick!’
She dropped down on her knees by a
chair, and set to weeping in serious earnest.
Edgar persevered in his resolution as far as the court;
there he lingered. I resolved to encourage him.
‘Miss is dreadfully wayward,
sir,’ I called out. ’As bad as any
marred child: you’d better be riding home,
or else she will be sick, only to grieve us.’
The soft thing looked askance through
the window: he possessed the power to depart
as much as a cat possesses the power to leave a mouse
half killed, or a bird half eaten. Ah, I thought,
there will be no saving him: he’s doomed,
and flies to his fate! And so it was: he
turned abruptly, hastened into the house again, shut
the door behind him; and when I went in a while after
to inform them that Earnshaw had come home rabid drunk,
ready to pull the whole place about our ears (his ordinary
frame of mind in that condition), I saw the quarrel
had merely effected a closer intimacy had
broken the outworks of youthful timidity, and enabled
them to forsake the disguise of friendship, and confess
themselves lovers.
Intelligence of Mr. Hindley’s
arrival drove Linton speedily to his horse, and Catherine
to her chamber. I went to hide little Hareton,
and to take the shot out of the master’s fowling-piece,
which he was fond of playing with in his insane excitement,
to the hazard of the lives of any who provoked, or
even attracted his notice too much; and I had hit upon
the plan of removing it, that he might do less mischief
if he did go the length of firing the gun.