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<title><![CDATA[呼啸山庄 英文剧本 Wuthering Heights]]></title>
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<p><strong><a target="_blank" href="www.130q.com">Wuthering Heights script</a></strong></p>
<p>Call off your ungodly dogs!</p>
<p>Down!</p>
<p>Quiet! Down!</p>
<p>Are you Mr. Heathcliff?</p>
<p>Well, l'm Mr. Lockwood, your new tenant at the Grange.</p>
<p>l'm lost. l--</p>
<p>Can l get a guide from amongst your lads?</p>
<p>No, you cannot. l've only got one, and he's needed here.</p>
<p>Well, then, l'll have to stay till morning.</p>
<p>Do as you please.</p>
<p>Quiet! Down!</p>
<p>Thank you for your hospitality. Could you extend it to a cup of tea?</p>
<p>- Shall l? - You heard him ask for it.</p>
<p>Thank you.</p>
<p>l presume the amiable lady is Mrs. Heathcliff?</p>
<p>Would it be taxing your remarkable hospitality if l sat down?</p>
<p>l hope my hospitality will teach you...</p>
<p>not to make rash journeys on these moors.</p>
<p>As for staying here, l don't keep accommodations for visitors.</p>
<p>You can share a bed with one of the servants.</p>
<p>Thanks. l'll sleep in a chair, sir.</p>
<p>No. A stranger is a stranger.</p>
<p>Guests are so rare in this house that l hardly know how to receive them.</p>
<p>l and my dog.</p>
<p>Joseph, open up one of the upstairs rooms.</p>
<p>Here's a room for thee, sir.</p>
<p>Bridal chamber.</p>
<p>Nobody slept here for years.</p>
<p>lt's a trifle depressing.</p>
<p>- Can you light a fire? - No fire will burn in yonder grate.</p>
<p>Chimbley's all blocked up.</p>
<p>Very well. Thanks.</p>
<p>Good night.</p>
<p>l said good night.</p>
<p>Heathcliff!</p>
<p>Let me in!</p>
<p>l'm lost on the moors!</p>
<p>- lt's Cathy! - Help! Mr. Heathcliff!</p>
<p>There's somebody out!</p>
<p>Oh, Mr. Heathcliff!</p>
<p>There's someone out there. lt's a woman. l heard her calling.</p>
<p>She said her name. Cathy. That was it!</p>
<p>Cathy?</p>
<p>Oh, l must have been dreaming. Forgive me.</p>
<p>Get out of this room. Get out!</p>
<p>Get out, l tell you!</p>
<p>Cathy! Come in!</p>
<p>Cathy, come back to me.</p>
<p>Oh, do come once more.</p>
<p>Oh, my heart's darling!</p>
<p>Cathy. My own--</p>
<p>My--</p>
<p>Where's he going in the storm?</p>
<p>She calls him...</p>
<p>and he follows her out onto the moor.</p>
<p>He's mad! He's like a madman.</p>
<p>He seized me by the collar and flung me out.</p>
<p>You see, l had a dream.</p>
<p>l thought l heard a voice calling.</p>
<p>l reached out to close the shutter, and something touched me.</p>
<p>Something cold and clinging, like an icy hand.</p>
<p>And then l saw her. A woman.</p>
<p>Then my senses must have become disordered because the falling snow...</p>
<p>shaped itself into what looked like a phantom, but there was nothing.</p>
<p>lt was Cathy.</p>
<p>Who is Cathy?</p>
<p>A girl who died.</p>
<p>Oh, no, l don't believe in ghosts.</p>
<p>l don't believe in phantoms sobbing through the night.</p>
<p>- Poor Cathy. - l don't believe life comes back...</p>
<p>once it's died and calls again to the living.</p>
<p>No, l don't.</p>
<p>Maybe if l told you her story, you'd change your mind...</p>
<p>about the dead coming back.</p>
<p>Maybe you'd know, as l do...</p>
<p>that there is a force that brings them back...</p>
<p>if their hearts were wild enough in life.</p>
<p>Tell me her story.</p>
<p>lt began 40 years ago...</p>
<p>when l was young...</p>
<p>in the service of Mr. Earnshaw...</p>
<p>Cathy's father.</p>
<p>Cathy's father.</p>
<p>Wuthering Heights was a lovely place in those days...</p>
<p>full of summertime and youth and happy voices.</p>
<p>One day Mr. Earnshaw was returning from a visit to Liverpool.</p>
<p>- You'll not catch me! - Yes, l will!</p>
<p>Cathy, go wash! l don't want your father to see you in that dress.</p>
<p>You too, Hindley. Hurry up, now.</p>
<p>l don't want to get washed!</p>
<p>Come along! l'll tell your father not to give you the present he's bringing.</p>
<p>- What's he bringing? - Go along upstairs.</p>
<p>Joseph says his horse is coming over the hill.</p>
<p>Evening, Mr. Earnshaw.</p>
<p>- Hello, Joseph. - Hello, neighbor Earnshaw.</p>
<p>- How are you, Dr. Kenneth? - Back so soon?</p>
<p>What in the world have you got there?</p>
<p>A gift of God.</p>
<p>Although it's as dark as if he came from the devil.</p>
<p>- Quiet, me bonny lad, we're home. - He's a dour-looking individual.</p>
<p>Aye, and with reason. l found him starving in Liverpool...</p>
<p>kicked and bruised and almost dead.</p>
<p>So you kidnapped him.</p>
<p>Not until l spent two pounds trying to find out who its owner was.</p>
<p>But nobody would claim him, so l brought him home.</p>
<p>- Giddap! - Here, here!</p>
<p>Come on, you young imp of Satan. Off with ye.</p>
<p>- Cathy, Hindley! - Welcome home. The children are coming.</p>
<p>Don't look so shocked, Ellen.</p>
<p>He's going to live with us for a while. Give him a good scrubbing...</p>
<p>and put some Christian clothes on him.</p>
<p>Food is what he needs most, Mr. Earnshaw.</p>
<p>He's as thin as a sparrow. Come into the kitchen, child.</p>
<p>Cathy! Hindley!</p>
<p>- Father, what did you bring me? - Hello, Father!</p>
<p>There you are. lt's what you've always wanted.</p>
<p>A riding crop. Be careful how you use it.</p>
<p>- Oh, it's wonderful! - l'm so glad you got back soon.</p>
<p>- lt's wonderful! - Ow! Father, make her stop!</p>
<p>No, children.</p>
<p>This is Hindley's violin.</p>
<p>One of the best in Liverpool.</p>
<p>Here. Fine tone.</p>
<p>And a bow to go with it.</p>
<p>Here you are, Paganini.</p>
<p>Who's that?</p>
<p>- He was hungry as a wolf. - Oh, children.</p>
<p>This is a little gentleman l met in Liverpool who will pay us a visit.</p>
<p>He-- He's dirty.</p>
<p>Oh, no. Don't make me ashamed of you, Cathy.</p>
<p>When he's been scrubbed, show him Hindley's room.</p>
<p>- He'll sleep there. - ln my room?</p>
<p>He can't. l won't let him.</p>
<p>Children, you may as well learn now that you must share what you have...</p>
<p>with others not as fortunate as yourselves.</p>
<p>- Take charge of the lad, Ellen. - Come along, child.</p>
<p>What's your name?</p>
<p>We'll call him Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Heathcliff, l'll race you to the barn. The loser has to be the slave.</p>
<p>Come on!</p>
<p>Faster!</p>
<p>Come on!</p>
<p>Whoa. l won!</p>
<p>You're my slave! You have to do as l say. Water my horse and groom it!</p>
<p>Oh, that's not fair! lt's too real.</p>
<p>- What do you want? - This horse.</p>
<p>- You can't have him. He's mine! - Mine's lame. l'm riding yours.</p>
<p>Give him to me or l'll tell Father you boasted you'd turn me out when he died!</p>
<p>That's a lie! l never said such a thing.</p>
<p>- He didn't! - You never had a father!</p>
<p>You gypsy beggar! You can't have mine!</p>
<p>Stop that!</p>
<p>- Heathcliff, look out! - Don't come near me!</p>
<p>Let him go! You killed him!</p>
<p>l'm going to tell Father. He'll punish you for this.</p>
<p>You can't go near him till he's well.</p>
<p>- You heard Dr. Kenneth! - Are you hurt badly?</p>
<p>Talk to me.</p>
<p>Why don't you cry? Heathcliff, don't look like that!</p>
<p>How can l pay him back?</p>
<p>l don't care how long l wait...</p>
<p>if l can only pay him back.</p>
<p>Come. Let's pick harebells on Penistone Crag.</p>
<p>You can ride Jane.</p>
<p>Please, milord?</p>
<p>- Oh, Heathcliff. - Whoa, Jane.</p>
<p>- You're so handsome when you smile. - Don't make fun of me.</p>
<p>Don't you know that you're handsome? Do you know what l've told Ellen?</p>
<p>- You're a prince in disguise. - You did?</p>
<p>l said your father was the emperor of China and your mother an lndian queen.</p>
<p>lt's true, Heathcliff.</p>
<p>You were kidnapped by wicked sailors and brought to England.</p>
<p>But l'm glad. l've always wanted to know somebody of noble birth.</p>
<p>All the princes l ever read about had castles.</p>
<p>Of course. They captured them. You must capture one too.</p>
<p>There's a beautiful castle that lies waiting for your lance, Sir Prince.</p>
<p>You mean Penistone Crag? Aw, that's just a rock.</p>
<p>lf you can't see that's a castle, you'll never be a prince.</p>
<p>Here, take your lance and charge!</p>
<p>See that black knight at the drawbridge? Challenge him!</p>
<p>Charge!</p>
<p>l challenge you to mortal combat, Black Knight!</p>
<p>Heathcliff! You've killed him! You've killed the black knight!</p>
<p>He's earned it for all his wicked deeds.</p>
<p>Oh, it's a wonderful castle.</p>
<p>- Heathcliff, let's never leave it. - Never in our lives!</p>
<p>Let all the world confess, there is not a more beautiful damsel...</p>
<p>than the Princess Catherine of Yorkshire.</p>
<p>But l'm still your slave.</p>
<p>No, Cathy. l now make you my queen.</p>
<p>Whatever happens out there, here you will always be my queen.</p>
<p>How is he, Doctor?</p>
<p>He is at peace.</p>
<p>Send for the vicar, Joseph.</p>
<p>My dear, wild little Cathy.</p>
<p>You may come up and pray beside him now.</p>
<p>You're not wanted up there.</p>
<p>My father is past your wheedling.</p>
<p>Go and help the stable boys harness the horse for the vicar.</p>
<p>Do as you're told. l'm master here now.</p>
<p>And as the children grew up, Hindley was indeed master of Wuthering Heights.</p>
<p>lt was no longer the happy home of their childhood.</p>
<p>- Joseph, bring me another bottle. - That's the third, Mr. Hindley.</p>
<p>The third or the twenty-third, bring me another.</p>
<p>Wine is a mocker. Strong drink is raging, Master Hindley.</p>
<p>Stop spouting scripture and do as you're told, you croaking old parrot.</p>
<p>Yes, Master Hindley.</p>
<p>Sit down, Cathy, till you're excused from the table.</p>
<p>Joseph, fill Miss Cathy's glass.</p>
<p>Oh, my little sister disapproves of drinking.</p>
<p>Well, l know some people who don't.</p>
<p>Heathcliff, saddle my horse. Be quick about it, you gypsy beggar.</p>
<p>l told you to be quick.</p>
<p>Look at this stable. lt's a pigsty. ls this the way you do your work?</p>
<p>Clean it up. l want this floor cleaned and scrubbed tonight.</p>
<p>Don't stand there showing your teeth. Give me a hand up.</p>
<p>l want your work done when l come back at dawn, do you hear?</p>
<p>Oh, you're hoping l won't come back.</p>
<p>You're hoping l'll fall and break my neck, aren't you?</p>
<p>Aren't you?</p>
<p>Well, come on, Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Heathcliff, where are you going?</p>
<p>Come back!</p>
<p>- Did Joseph see which way you came? - What does it matter?</p>
<p>Nothing's real down there. Our life is here.</p>
<p>Yes, milord.</p>
<p>The clouds are lowering over Gimmerton Head.</p>
<p>See how the light is changing?</p>
<p>lt would be dreadful if Hindley ever found out.</p>
<p>Found out what?</p>
<p>That you talk to me once in a while?</p>
<p>l shouldn't talk to you at all.</p>
<p>Look at you! You get worse every day.</p>
<p>Dirty and unkempt and in rags. Why aren't you a man?</p>
<p>Heathcliff, why don't you run away?</p>
<p>Run away? From you?</p>
<p>You could come back rich and take me away.</p>
<p>Why aren't you my prince like we said long ago?</p>
<p>- Why can't you rescue me? - Come with me now.</p>
<p>- Where? - Anywhere!</p>
<p>And live in haystacks and steal our food from the marketplaces?</p>
<p>No. That's not what l want.</p>
<p>You just want to send me off. That won't do.</p>
<p>l've stayed here and been beaten like a dog.</p>
<p>Abused and cursed and driven mad, but l stayed just to be near you.</p>
<p>Even as a dog! l'll stay till the end. l'll live and l'll die under this rock.</p>
<p>Do you hear?</p>
<p>Music.</p>
<p>The Lintons are giving a party.</p>
<p>That's what l want. Dancing and singing in a pretty world.</p>
<p>And l'm going to have it.</p>
<p>Come on. Let's go and see. Come on!</p>
<p>lsn't it wonderful?</p>
<p>lsn't she beautiful? That's the kind of dress l'll wear.</p>
<p>You'll have a red velvet coat with silver buckles on your shoes.</p>
<p>Oh, will we ever?</p>
<p>Quick.</p>
<p>- Hold him, Skulker, Flash! - Call off your dogs, you fools!</p>
<p>Stay where you are. There's nothing to be alarmed about.</p>
<p>- Who is it? - l don't know.</p>
<p>Please, back into the ballroom.</p>
<p>- Let me go! - Hold that man.</p>
<p>Hold onto him!</p>
<p>- Who is it Edgar? - Catherine Earnshaw, Father.</p>
<p>- Who's this with her? - Their stable boy.</p>
<p>She's bleeding. Bring hot water, lsabella, and bandages.</p>
<p>- Yes. How badly is she hurt? - Can't tell.</p>
<p>Send Robert to get Dr. Kenneth in the shay. Hurry.</p>
<p>- You'll pay for this! - Hold your tongue, insolent rascal!</p>
<p>- Get out of this house. - l won't go without Cathy.</p>
<p>Father, please, she's in pain.</p>
<p>Go on. Run away.</p>
<p>Bring me back the world.</p>
<p>- Pack this fellow off. - l'm going.</p>
<p>l'm going from here and from this cursed country both.</p>
<p>Throw him out!</p>
<p>But l'll be back in this house one day, Judge Linton. l'll pay you out.</p>
<p>l'll bring this house down in ruins about your heads.</p>
<p>That's my curse on you!</p>
<p>On all of you!</p>
<p>And so Cathy found herself in this new world...</p>
<p>she had so often longed to enter.</p>
<p>After some happy weeks, Mr. Edgar brought her back to Wuthering Heights.</p>
<p>Welcome home, Miss Cathy! How do you do, Mr. Linton?</p>
<p>Don't stir! l'll get Joseph to carry you.</p>
<p>Carry her? She runs like a little goat.</p>
<p>Ellen, l've been dancing, night after night!</p>
<p>Oh, how beautiful you look! Wherever did you get that beautiful dress?</p>
<p>Mr. Linton's sister lent it to me. lsn't it wonderful?</p>
<p>Edgar, do come in for tea.</p>
<p>As soon as the horses have been seen to.</p>
<p>l'll find someone.</p>
<p>ls he here?</p>
<p>He came back last week with great talk...</p>
<p>of lying in a lake of fire without you-- how he had to see you to live.</p>
<p>He's unbearable. Where could he be, the scoundrel?</p>
<p>Why did you stay so long in that house?</p>
<p>l didn't expect to find you here.</p>
<p>Why did you stay so long?</p>
<p>Why? Because l was having a wonderful time.</p>
<p>A delightful, fascinating, wonderful time...</p>
<p>among human beings.</p>
<p>Go and wash your face and hands, and comb your hair...</p>
<p>so that l needn't be ashamed of you in front of a guest.</p>
<p>What are you doing in this part of the house? Look after Mr. Linton's horses.</p>
<p>Let him look after his own.</p>
<p>- l've already done so. - Apologize to Mr. Linton at once.</p>
<p>Bring in some tea, please.</p>
<p>- Cathy. - Yes, Edgar?</p>
<p>l cannot understand how your brother can allow that gypsy in the house.</p>
<p>Don't talk about him.</p>
<p>How can you, a gentlewoman, tolerate him under your roof?</p>
<p>A roadside beggar giving himself airs of equality. How can you?</p>
<p>What do you know about Heathcliff?</p>
<p>- All l need or want to know. - He was my friend long before you.</p>
<p>- That blackguard? - Blackguard and all, he belongs here.</p>
<p>Speak well of him or get out!</p>
<p>- Are you out of your senses? - Stop calling those l love names!</p>
<p>Those you love?</p>
<p>Cathy, what possesses you? Do you realize the things you're saying?</p>
<p>l'm saying that l hate you.</p>
<p>l hate the look of your milk-white face.</p>
<p>l hate the touch of your soft, foolish hands.</p>
<p>That gypsy's evil soul has got into you.</p>
<p>- Yes, it's true! - That beggar's dirt is on you!</p>
<p>Yes! Now get out!</p>
<p>My dear.</p>
<p>Leave me alone.</p>
<p>Forgive me, Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Make the world stop right here.</p>
<p>Make everything stop and stand still and never move again.</p>
<p>Make the moors never change and you and l never change.</p>
<p>The moors and l will never change.</p>
<p>- Don't you, Cathy. - l can't.</p>
<p>No matter what l ever do or say, this is me now.</p>
<p>Standing on this hill with you.</p>
<p>This is me forever.</p>
<p>Come.</p>
<p>When you went away, what did you do? Where did you go?</p>
<p>l went to Liverpool.</p>
<p>One night l shipped for America on a brigantine going to New Orleans.</p>
<p>We were held up by the tide, and l lay all night on the deck...</p>
<p>thinking of you and the years and years ahead without you.</p>
<p>l jumped overboard and swam ashore.</p>
<p>l think l'd have died if you hadn't.</p>
<p>You're not thinking of that other world now.</p>
<p>Smell the heather.</p>
<p>Fill my arms with heather. All they can hold.</p>
<p>Come on.</p>
<p>You're still my queen!</p>
<p>And as time went by...</p>
<p>Cathy again was torn between her wild, uncontrollable passion for Heathcliff...</p>
<p>and the new life she had found at the Grange...</p>
<p>that she could not forget.</p>
<p>l got the soap in my eyes! Where's the towel?</p>
<p>- Oh, it's hot! - No, it's just--</p>
<p>- lt's hot! - Don't do that!</p>
<p>Ellen, haven't you finished yet?</p>
<p>Supposing you're not ready when he gets here. Keep still.</p>
<p>Any young man that will come sniveling back after the way you treated him...</p>
<p>you can keep waiting forever.</p>
<p>What's wrong with him, sending you perfume? Hasn't he any pride?</p>
<p>l sent my apologies, didn't l?</p>
<p>l can't believe this change in you, Miss Cathy.</p>
<p>Yesterday you were a harum-scarum child with dirty hands and a willful heart.</p>
<p>Look at you.</p>
<p>Oh, you're lovely, Miss Cathy. Lovely.</p>
<p>That's a very silly lie.</p>
<p>l'm not lovely. What l am is very brilliant.</p>
<p>- l have a wonderful brain. - lndeed?</p>
<p>lt enables me to be superior to myself.</p>
<p>There's nothing to be gained by just looking pretty like lsabella.</p>
<p>Every beauty mark must conceal a thought and every curl be full of humor...</p>
<p>as well as brilliantine.</p>
<p>as well as brilliantine.</p>
<p>Such prattle. We--</p>
<p>Since when are you in the habit of entering my room, Heathcliff?</p>
<p>l want to talk to you. Go outside, Ellen.</p>
<p>l will not! l take orders from Mistress Catherine, not stable boys.</p>
<p>Go outside.</p>
<p>All right, Ellen.</p>
<p>Now that we're so happily alone, may l know to what l owe this great honor?</p>
<p>- He's coming here again. - You're utterly unbearable.</p>
<p>You didn't think so this morning on the moors.</p>
<p>- Well, my moods change indoors. - ls he coming here?</p>
<p>- Of course not. Please go away. - You're lying!</p>
<p>Why are you dressed up in a silk dress?</p>
<p>Because gentlefolk dress for dinner.</p>
<p>Not you. Why are you trying to win his puling flatteries?</p>
<p>l'm not a child. You can't talk like that to me.</p>
<p>l'm not talking to a child. l'm talking to my Cathy.</p>
<p>- Oh, l'm your Cathy? - Yes!</p>
<p>l'm to take your orders and allow you to select my dresses?</p>
<p>You're not gonna simper in front of him, listening to his silly talk!</p>
<p>l'm not?</p>
<p>Well, l am. lt's more entertaining that listening to a stable boy.</p>
<p>- Don't you talk like that. - l will. Go away.</p>
<p>This is my room, a lady's room, not a room for servants with dirty hands.</p>
<p>Let me alone!</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>Tell the dirty stable boy to let go of you.</p>
<p>He soils your pretty dress.</p>
<p>But who soils your heart? Not Heathcliff!</p>
<p>Who turns you into a vain, cheap, worldly fool? Linton does!</p>
<p>You'll never love him, but you'll let yourself be loved to please your vanity.</p>
<p>Loved by that milksop with buckles on his shoes!</p>
<p>Stop it and get out!</p>
<p>You had your chance to be something else.</p>
<p>But thief or servant were all you were born to be, or beggar beside a road.</p>
<p>Not earning favors, but whimpering for them with your dirty hands!</p>
<p>That's all l've become to you: a pair of dirty hands.</p>
<p>Well, have them then!</p>
<p>Have them where they belong!</p>
<p>lt doesn't help to strike you.</p>
<p>Good evening, Ellen. l hope l'm not too early.</p>
<p>- Miss Cathy will be down in a minute. - Thanks.</p>
<p>lf you'll go into the parlor, l'll tell Miss Cathy you're here.</p>
<p>Half past eight. Unholy hour.</p>
<p>Doesn't he know, young fool, when it's time to go home?</p>
<p>That's Mr. Edgar now.</p>
<p>Go and fetch his horse.</p>
<p>- Take these apples into the larder. - Yea, Lord.</p>
<p>Spare the righteous and smite the ungodly.</p>
<p>Stop your pratter.</p>
<p>- Good night, Joseph. - Good night, sir.</p>
<p>Has he gone?</p>
<p>Your hands! What have you done?</p>
<p>Linton. ls he gone?</p>
<p>What have you done to your hands?</p>
<p>What have you been doing?</p>
<p>l want to crawl to her feet, whimper to be forgiven...</p>
<p>for loving me, for needing her more than my own life...</p>
<p>for belonging to her more than my own soul.</p>
<p>Don't let her see me.</p>
<p>l wondered whether you were still up. l have some news!</p>
<p>The kitchen is no place for that. Come into the parlor.</p>
<p>Come here. Sit down. Listen!</p>
<p>Can you keep a secret? Edgar's asked me to marry him.</p>
<p>- What did you tell him? - That l'd give him my answer tomorrow.</p>
<p>Do you love him, Miss Cathy?</p>
<p>- Yes! Of course. - Why?</p>
<p>Why? That's a silly question, isn't it?</p>
<p>No, not so silly. Why do you love him?</p>
<p>He's handsome and pleasant to be with.</p>
<p>- That's not enough. - Because he'll be rich someday.</p>
<p>l'll be the finest lady in the county.</p>
<p>Now tell me how you love him.</p>
<p>l love the ground under his feet, the air above his head...</p>
<p>and everything he touches.</p>
<p>What about Heathcliff?</p>
<p>Oh, Heathcliff. He gets worse every day.</p>
<p>lt would degrade me to marry him.</p>
<p>l wish he hadn't come back.</p>
<p>lt would be heaven to escape from this disorderly, comfortless place.</p>
<p>Well, if Master Edgar and his charms and money...</p>
<p>Well, if Master Edgar and his charms and money...</p>
<p>and parties mean heaven to you...</p>
<p>what's to keep you from taking your place among the Linton angels?</p>
<p>l don't think l belong in heaven.</p>
<p>l dreamt once l was there.</p>
<p>l dreamt l went to heaven, and it didn't seem to be my home.</p>
<p>l broke my heart with weeping to come back to earth.</p>
<p>The angels were so angry, they flung me out in the middle of the heath...</p>
<p>on top of Wuthering Heights.</p>
<p>l woke up sobbing with joy.</p>
<p>That's it, Ellen!</p>
<p>l have no more business marrying Edgar than l have of being in heaven.</p>
<p>But Ellen, what can l do?</p>
<p>You're thinking of Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Who else?</p>
<p>He's sunk so low. He seems to take pleasure in being brutal.</p>
<p>And yet...</p>
<p>he's more myself than l am.</p>
<p>Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same.</p>
<p>Linton's is as different as frost from fire.</p>
<p>My one thought in living is Heathcliff.</p>
<p>l am Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Everything he's suffered, l've suffered.</p>
<p>The little happiness he's ever known, l've had too.</p>
<p>lf everything died and Heathcliff remained...</p>
<p>life would still be full for me.</p>
<p>Hey, Heathcliff! Where's thee going?</p>
<p>Heathcliff! Come back!</p>
<p>He must have been listening.</p>
<p>- Listening to us? - Yes.</p>
<p>Where?</p>
<p>How much did he hear?</p>
<p>l'm not sure, but l think...</p>
<p>to where you said it would degrade you to marry him.</p>
<p>There's no use in calling. He's run away on master's best horse.</p>
<p>Come out of this storm! You'll catch your death of cold!</p>
<p>- He won't come back! - Last time he did!</p>
<p>This time he won't. l know him.</p>
<p>- Which way did he go, Joseph? - Yonder. Right on west moor.</p>
<p>- Come in! You must come in. - The fool.</p>
<p>He should have known l love him. l love him!</p>
<p>Heathcliff, come back!</p>
<p>- Thank heaven you've come home! - l told Joseph to stay awake!</p>
<p>- Do l unsaddle my own horse? - You've got to go out again!</p>
<p>Miss Cathy's gone! They're looking for her-- Joseph, everybody!</p>
<p>- Gone where? - Out in the storm, hours ago.</p>
<p>Heathcliff ran away. He took a horse, and she went running after him.</p>
<p>- Oh, she did? - Yes.</p>
<p>Don't stand there with your mouth open. Fetch me a bottle and we'll celebrate.</p>
<p>Master Hindley, she'll die on the moors.</p>
<p>- You've got to help. - Do as l tell you!</p>
<p>lf she's gone off with that gypsy scum, let her run.</p>
<p>Let her run through storm and hell. They're birds of a feather.</p>
<p>The devil can take them both. Get me a bottle.</p>
<p>- Take her into the library. - Get a fire in the east room.</p>
<p>And some brandy.</p>
<p>Turn this around to the fire.</p>
<p>- The brandy, Miss lsabella. - Get some dry towels. Quickly.</p>
<p>- Where was she? - The rocks on Penistone Crag...</p>
<p>the life almost out of her.</p>
<p>Twenty drops in a glass of claret, well warmed.</p>
<p>Then add a lump of sugar. There's nothing else l can tell you...</p>
<p>except keep her in the sun and give her plenty of cream and butter.</p>
<p>ln another month you'll be feeling like new.</p>
<p>- Good-bye, dear. - Good-bye, Dr. Kenneth.</p>
<p>She'll be going home soon, Doctor.</p>
<p>What's needed is peace and orderliness in her life.</p>
<p>That's not to be found at Wuthering Heights.</p>
<p>- Has she mentioned him at all? - Not since the delirium passed.</p>
<p>Sometimes fever can heal as well as destroy.</p>
<p>l made some inquiries in the village of the people who knew him.</p>
<p>- What did you hear? - No sign nor hint of Heathcliff.</p>
<p>- He's disappeared into thin air. - Heaven hope.</p>
<p>''... days and yon pursuits.''</p>
<p>- Hello, Edgar. - lsabella. How's our invalid?</p>
<p>- Much better l think. - Let me have a look at her.</p>
<p>Where have you been all day? l've missed you.</p>
<p>Oh, this time of year every tenant has something to complain about.</p>
<p>l've been arguing with old Swithin...</p>
<p>whether we'd build him a new pigsty.</p>
<p>Yes?&nbsp;&nbsp; <a href="http://www.130q.com"><font color="#ffffff">www.130q.com</font></a></p>
<p>He decided we should.</p>
<p>l saw Hindley in the village this afternoon.</p>
<p>He wanted to know when you'll be coming home.</p>
<p>l wasn't very truthful. l told him Dr. Kenneth said it would be months.</p>
<p>Give me that. lt's time for her medicine.</p>
<p>What did Dr. Kenneth say?</p>
<p>Twenty lumps of sugar in a glass-- No. l'll go and ask Ellen.</p>
<p>Yes. Go and ask Ellen.</p>
<p>She's such a darling. But you've all been so nice to me.</p>
<p>That's all l think about, how nice you are to me.</p>
<p>But still, l can't stay here forever.</p>
<p>Why not, Cathy...</p>
<p>if l can make you happy?</p>
<p>You have made me happy, Edgar.</p>
<p>You've given me so much of your own self, your strength.</p>
<p>Darling, let me take care of you forever.</p>
<p>Let me guard you and love you always.</p>
<p>Would you love me always?</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>lt's so easy to love you.</p>
<p>Because l'm no longer wild and blackhearted and full of gypsy ways?</p>
<p>- No. l-- - Of course you were right, Edgar.</p>
<p>What you said long ago was true.</p>
<p>There was a strange curse on me.</p>
<p>Something that kept me from being myself.</p>
<p>Or at least from being what l wanted to be--</p>
<p>living in heaven.</p>
<p>How sweet you are.</p>
<p>l've never kissed you.</p>
<p>No one will ever kiss me again but you.</p>
<p>No one.</p>
<p>l'll be your wife and be proud of being your wife.</p>
<p>l'll be good to you and love you truly, always.</p>
<p>White heather for good luck, Miss Catherine.</p>
<p>Come along, Cathy.</p>
<p>What is it?</p>
<p>A cold wind went across my heart just then--</p>
<p>a feeling of doom.</p>
<p>You touched me, and it was gone.</p>
<p>Oh, it's nothing, darling, l'm sure.</p>
<p>Oh, Edgar, l love you. l do.</p>
<p>Good-bye.</p>
<p>And l, too, felt a cold wind across my heart as they rode away together.</p>
<p>And l, too, felt a cold wind across my heart as they rode away together.</p>
<p>But as the years went on, they were really in possession...</p>
<p>of a deep and growing happiness.</p>
<p>l wish you could've seen Miss Cathy then.</p>
<p>She became quite the lady of the manor and was almost overfond of Mr. Linton.</p>
<p>For lsabella, she showed great affection...</p>
<p>and presided over Thrushcross Grange...</p>
<p>with quiet dignity.</p>
<p>lt looks as though you've fallen into a trap, Father.</p>
<p>Yes, it does, doesn't it?</p>
<p>There you are.</p>
<p>Checkmate.</p>
<p>- Thank you, Father. - Well, l'll go and dress for dinner.</p>
<p>What's wrong with the dogs?</p>
<p>Probably a servant coming back from the village.</p>
<p>l talked to Jeff Peters this afternoon about that new wing of ours.</p>
<p>lt doesn't look as though we'll marry lsabella off for another decade.</p>
<p>lt's a brother's duty to introduce your sister to some other type...</p>
<p>than fops and pale young poets.</p>
<p>- You want a dragoon? - Yes, l do. With a fiery mustache.</p>
<p>Poor lsabella. l'm afraid l got the only prize in the county.</p>
<p>Thank you, darling. For me, heaven is bounded...</p>
<p>by the four walls of this room.</p>
<p>Yes, we're all angels, even my little petit point hero.</p>
<p>l'm just putting wings on him.</p>
<p>Speaking of wings, l'll show you those plans.</p>
<p>- Miss Cathy? - What is it?</p>
<p>Someone wishes to see you.</p>
<p>- You sound as if it were a ghost. - lt is. He's come back.</p>
<p>Who?</p>
<p>- What does he want? - He wants to see you.</p>
<p>Tell him-- Tell him l'm not at home.</p>
<p>Not at home, Cathy? To whom are you not at home?</p>
<p>lt's Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Seems he's come back.</p>
<p>Well, that's news. Where has he been?</p>
<p>America, he said. He's so changed l hardly recognized him.</p>
<p>- For the better, l hope. - Oh, yes. He's quite the gentlemen.</p>
<p>- Fine clothes, a horse. - Go tell him l don't wish to see him.</p>
<p>Oh, nonsense, Cathy. We can't be as cruel as that.</p>
<p>He's come a long way, and he's a fine gentleman, so Ellen says.</p>
<p>Let's see how America's managed to make a silk purse out of Master Heathcliff.</p>
<p>- Show him in. - Yes, Master Edgar.</p>
<p>lt's chilly.</p>
<p>Why be nervous? The past is dead.</p>
<p>lt's nonsense to tremble before a little ghost who returns--</p>
<p>a dead leaf blowing around your feet.</p>
<p>Darling...</p>
<p>you may smile at him without fear of offending me.</p>
<p>lt's my wife who smiles--</p>
<p>my wife who loves me.</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>l was silly.</p>
<p>Thank you, Edgar.</p>
<p>Well, Heathcliff.</p>
<p>- Mr. Linton. - How are you?</p>
<p>Hello, Cathy.</p>
<p>- l remember this room. - Come in. Sit by the fire.</p>
<p>Have a whiskey?</p>
<p>No, thank you.</p>
<p>l've never seen such a change in a man. l wouldn't have known you.</p>
<p>You seem to have prospered since our last meeting.</p>
<p>Somewhat.</p>
<p>Ellen said you'd been to America.</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>We all wondered where you went.</p>
<p>Have you met my sister, Miss Linton?</p>
<p>What brought about this amazing transformation?</p>
<p>Did you discover a gold mine in the New World...</p>
<p>or inherit a fortune?</p>
<p>The truth is, l remembered that my father was an emperor of China...</p>
<p>and my mother was an lndian queen...</p>
<p>and l went out and claimed my inheritance.</p>
<p>lt all turned out just as you once suspected, Cathy...</p>
<p>that l had been kidnapped by wicked sailors and brought to England.</p>
<p>That l was of noble birth.</p>
<p>Are you visiting here long?</p>
<p>l mean, in the village?</p>
<p>The rest of my life.</p>
<p>l've just bought Wuthering Heights--</p>
<p>the house, the stock and the moors.</p>
<p>Hindley has sold you the estate?</p>
<p>He's not aware of it as yet.</p>
<p>l'm afraid it'll be somewhat of a surprise when he finds...</p>
<p>his gambling debts and liquor bills paid off by his former stable boy.</p>
<p>Perhaps he will merely laugh at the irony of it.</p>
<p>l don't understand how this could've happened...</p>
<p>without Mrs. Linton hearing of it.</p>
<p>Modesty compelled me to play the Good Samaritan in secret.</p>
<p>By heaven. This is the most underhanded piece of work l've ever heard of.</p>
<p>lf l'd only known. l knew Hindley had financial difficulties...</p>
<p>but not that his property was being stolen from him by a stranger.</p>
<p>l'm neither thief nor stranger. Merely your neighbor, sir.</p>
<p>- Now l'll say good night. - Wait, Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Edgar and l have many neighbors whom we receive with hospitality and friendship.</p>
<p>lf you are to be one of them, you're welcome to visit our house...</p>
<p>but not with a scowl on your face or an old bitterness in your heart.</p>
<p>Thank you.</p>
<p>lt occurs to me that l have not congratulated you on your marriage.</p>
<p>l've often thought of it.</p>
<p>Allow me to express my delight over your happiness now.</p>
<p>Good night.</p>
<p>- l think you behaved abominably. - What?</p>
<p>You, too, Cathy. l'm dreadfully disappointed in both of you.</p>
<p>- What are you talking about? - You could have been civil to him.</p>
<p>l conducted myself perfectly, and so did Cathy.</p>
<p>- You dismissed him like a servant. - And you thought him otherwise?</p>
<p>- l thought him distinguished. - l hope l misunderstood you.</p>
<p>lt's impossible my sister could think of Heathcliff...</p>
<p>as anything but a surly, dressed-up beggar, a lout and a boor.</p>
<p>l shall make sure that you never see him again.</p>
<p>Now go to dinner.</p>
<p>Joseph.</p>
<p>Yes, Master Hindley?</p>
<p>- Where's the key? - ls it in the door?</p>
<p>No, and l want it. He's left, and it's our chance. l'll lock him out this time.</p>
<p>lf he tries to get in, l'll kill him.</p>
<p>Find that key, and bring me a bottle of wine.</p>
<p>- You've had a bad night. - A bad night, you call it?</p>
<p>How can l stay sober with that vulture's beak inside me?</p>
<p>He stabbed me in the dark. He robbed me of my home and gold.</p>
<p>- Where's the wine? - Dr. Kenneth has forbid it.</p>
<p>- Blast Dr. Kenneth! - Get him what he wants.</p>
<p>Dr. Kenneth has forbid it.</p>
<p>What difference to the world whether he's drunk or sober?</p>
<p>Or to Dr. Kenneth? Do as l tell you.</p>
<p>Get out.</p>
<p>lt's too early in the morning to look on the devil.</p>
<p>Your ingratitude makes me almost sad.</p>
<p>All l have done to you is to enable you to be yourself.</p>
<p>My money has helped you drink and gamble and enjoy the world as you wished.</p>
<p>Now that you're without a home l remember that you gave me...</p>
<p>a place to sleep when you might've turned me out.</p>
<p>l allow you to remain...</p>
<p>and even provide you with solace...</p>
<p>against the doctor's orders.</p>
<p>l'll have Wuthering Heights back.</p>
<p>l'll be master here, and l'll turn you out as l should have done years ago.</p>
<p>We're just in time, Joseph.</p>
<p>Mr. Hindley is beginning to whine and stutter.</p>
<p>He needs fire in his veins--</p>
<p>a little courage with which to face his unhappy life.</p>
<p>l'll have my gold, and l'll have your blood, and hell can have your soul!</p>
<p>Laugh now, Heathcliff.</p>
<p>There's no laughter in hell.</p>
<p>All you have to do is to shoot.</p>
<p>They'll thank me for it.</p>
<p>The world will say l did right ridding it of a rotten gypsy beggar!</p>
<p>Yes! They'll say that.</p>
<p>Shoot, and you'll be master here again.</p>
<p>The whole county will resound with your courage.</p>
<p>Go on, shoot, you puling chicken of a man...</p>
<p>with not enough blood in you to keep your hand steady!</p>
<p>You remember that time you hit me with a rock?</p>
<p>The times you shamed and flogged me as your stable boy?</p>
<p>You were a coward then, and you're a coward now.</p>
<p>Take him out. Find someplace for him to sleep.</p>
<p>Aye. l'll put him to bed.</p>
<p>Not in the master's room.</p>
<p>l'm master here now.</p>
<p>- His pistol. - Aye. l'll hide it.</p>
<p>A gentleman must not be deprived of his weapons.</p>
<p>l prefer that he have it by him always as a reminder of his cowardice.</p>
<p>- Master Heathcliff. - What is it?</p>
<p>- A lady to see you. - A lady? From where?</p>
<p>The Grange, sir.</p>
<p>The Grange? Why didn't you tell me?</p>
<p>Out of my way.</p>
<p>l hope l'm not disturbing you.</p>
<p>Not at all.</p>
<p>l was riding behind the Heights on the moors, and my horse went lame.</p>
<p>- And you brought him here. - Yes.</p>
<p>That was very wise.</p>
<p>Shall we look at the animal?</p>
<p>That isn't necessary. l've put him in the stables.</p>
<p>He's being taken care of.</p>
<p>l see.</p>
<p>Won't you come in?</p>
<p>Get on with your work.</p>
<p>l was furious with my brother, and Cathy too. l told them so.</p>
<p>l thought they acted most shamefully.</p>
<p>Let me give you a chair.</p>
<p>Your brother didn't send you with these apologies?</p>
<p>Oh, no. He's forbidden me to--</p>
<p>To speak to me?</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>And Mrs. Linton?</p>
<p>She's also very angry with you.</p>
<p>So in all the county you are my only friend.</p>
<p>l would like to be.</p>
<p>Well, let us celebrate our new friendship by a gallop over the moors.</p>
<p>Oh, but my horse is lame.</p>
<p>My dear, your horse is not lame, and it never was.</p>
<p>You came to see me because you are lonely...</p>
<p>because it is lonely sitting like an outsider...</p>
<p>in so happy a house as your brother's--</p>
<p>lonely riding on the moors with no one at your side.</p>
<p>You won't be lonely anymore.</p>
<p>Good evening, sir.</p>
<p>Good evening, Ellen.</p>
<p>l was afraid you wouldn't come. Tonight would've been ruined if you hadn't.</p>
<p>Good heavens. ls that Heathcliff?</p>
<p>Yes, it is.</p>
<p>l can't believe it. Cathy having him here--</p>
<p>Not Cathy. lt's my sister.</p>
<p>lt's just a young girl's fancy, but one must not inflame it...</p>
<p>with too much opposition, but let it spend itself harmlessly in a few dances.</p>
<p>Madam Eilers is going to play the harpsichord. Come and sit down.</p>
<p>l shall let you hold my hand underneath my fan.</p>
<p>Thank you very much.</p>
<p>Oh, it's a waltz. Heathcliff, will you?</p>
<p>You see, we can hold each other, and no one can object...</p>
<p>because that's the way it's danced.</p>
<p>That's the way gypsies dance.</p>
<p>l'm surprised to see such abandoned ways creep into so fine a house.</p>
<p>Father used to say it'd undermine the whole of society...</p>
<p>and turn us into profligates.</p>
<p>- May l have the pleasure? - Thank you, but l don't think l can.</p>
<p>Nonsense. Let me see you waltz.</p>
<p>- Will you watch me? - Of course.</p>
<p>l'm ready.</p>
<p>You're not dancing this dance.</p>
<p>Thank you. l'm nearly exhausted.</p>
<p>Will the moonlight and a breath of air refresh you?</p>
<p>Always.</p>
<p>Excuse me, please.</p>
<p>Are you enjoying yourself, Heathcliff?</p>
<p>l've had the pleasure of watching you.</p>
<p>You're very grand, Heathcliff. So handsome.</p>
<p>Looking at you tonight l could not help but remember how things used to be.</p>
<p>They used to be better.</p>
<p>Don't pretend life hasn't improved for you.</p>
<p>Life has ended for me.</p>
<p>How can you stand here beside me and pretend not to remember?</p>
<p>Not to know that my heart is breaking for you?</p>
<p>That your face is the wonderful light burning in all this darkness?</p>
<p>Heathcliff, no. l forbid it.</p>
<p>You forbid what your heart says?</p>
<p>- lt's saying nothing. - l can hear it louder than the music.</p>
<p>Oh, Cathy.</p>
<p>l'm not the Cathy that was. Can't you understand?</p>
<p>l'm somebody else. l'm another man's wife, and he loves me. And l love him.</p>
<p>lf he loved you with all his soul for a lifetime...</p>
<p>he couldn't love you as much as l do in a single day.</p>
<p>Not he. Not the world.</p>
<p>Not even you, Cathy, can come between us.</p>
<p>You must go away. You must leave this house and never come back.</p>
<p>l never want to see your face again as long as l live.</p>
<p>You lie.</p>
<p>Why do you think l'm here tonight?</p>
<p>Because you willed it. You willed me here across the sea.</p>
<p>Cathy, have you seen Heathcliff? Oh, there you are.</p>
<p>They're going to play a schottische. Come along.</p>
<p>lt's quite suitable to your high moral character.</p>
<p>What's the matter? Has Cathy been behaving horribly again?</p>
<p>lf she weren't my sister-in-law, l'd say she was jealous.</p>
<p>Come along.</p>
<p>Come in.</p>
<p>- l want to talk to you. - What about, Cathy?</p>
<p>- About Heathcliff. - lt's very late.</p>
<p>l have no desire to discuss Heathcliff with you anyway.</p>
<p>- You behaved disgracefully tonight. - ln what way?</p>
<p>lt was bad enough your asking him here, but to make a spectacle of yourself.</p>
<p>Catherine, be careful of what you say.</p>
<p>You fool. You vain little fool.</p>
<p>l'll not be silent any longer. l'm going to tell the truth.</p>
<p>- Let me go. - Not till l open your eyes.</p>
<p>My eyes are quite open, thank you.</p>
<p>Don't you see what he's doing? He's using you to be near me...</p>
<p>to smile at me behind your back...</p>
<p>to try to rouse something in my heart that's dead.</p>
<p>l'll not have it. l'll not allow you to help him.</p>
<p>lt's you who are vain and insufferable.</p>
<p>- Heathcliff loves me. - lt's a lie.</p>
<p>lt's not a lie. He's told me so. He's kissed me.</p>
<p>He's held me in his arms. He's told me that he loves me.</p>
<p>- l'm going to your brother. - Go! He's asked me to marry him.</p>
<p>We're going to be married.</p>
<p>Heathcliff's going to be my husband.</p>
<p>You can't. Heathcliff's not a man...</p>
<p>but something dark and horrible to live with.</p>
<p>Do you imagine that l don't know why you're acting so?</p>
<p>Because you love him.</p>
<p>Yes! You love him! And you're mad with pain at the thought of my marrying him.</p>
<p>You want him to pine and dream of you...</p>
<p>die for you, while you live in comfort as Mrs. Linton.</p>
<p>You don't want him to be happy.</p>
<p>You want to make him suffer. You want to destroy him!</p>
<p>But l want to make him happy, and l will!</p>
<p>l heard your voices.</p>
<p>We were just discussing the ball.</p>
<p>There's plenty of time for gossip tomorrow.</p>
<p>You ought to come to bed, darling. You look tired.</p>
<p>Good night.</p>
<p>- Good morning, Joseph. - Mistress Cathy, l mean.</p>
<p>Mr. Hindley's away.</p>
<p>lt's Mr. Heathcliff l wish to see.</p>
<p>Oh.</p>
<p>Oh, aye.</p>
<p>l'll try and find him.</p>
<p>Leave us, Joseph.</p>
<p>What brings you to Wuthering Heights?</p>
<p>Does Edgar know? l doubt he'd approve.</p>
<p>Heathcliff, is it true?</p>
<p>- ls what true? - That you asked lsabella to marry you.</p>
<p>lt is true then. Oh, Heathcliff, you must not do this.</p>
<p>She hasn't harmed you.</p>
<p>- You have. - Then punish me!</p>
<p>l'm going to, when l take her in my arms--</p>
<p>when l promise her life and happiness.</p>
<p>lf there's anything human left in you, don't do this.</p>
<p>Don't make me a partner to such a crime. lt's stupid. lt's mad.</p>
<p>lf you ever looked at me with what is in you, l'd be your slave.</p>
<p>lf your heart were stronger than your fear of God and the world...</p>
<p>l would live silently contented in your shadow.</p>
<p>But no.</p>
<p>You must destroy us both with that weakness you call virtue.</p>
<p>You must keep me tormented with that cruelty you think so pious.</p>
<p>You've been smug and pleased with my vile love of you, haven't you?</p>
<p>After this, you won't think of me as Cathy's foolish and despairing lover.</p>
<p>You'll think of me as lsabella's husband...</p>
<p>and be glad for my happiness...</p>
<p>as l was for yours.</p>
<p>- Drive to the village. Get Mr. Linton. - Very well, ma'am.</p>
<p>Marry? lt's preposterous. lsabella and Heathcliff?</p>
<p>lt's true. What will you do about it?</p>
<p>Do? l'll put her under lock and key if need be.</p>
<p>- We must go after them. - Going after them is useless.</p>
<p>We must go after them while there's still time. They mustn't marry.</p>
<p>Don't disturb yourself. There's nothing l can do.</p>
<p>But you must, Edgar. Get your pistols.</p>
<p>Go after them. Kill him!</p>
<p>But stop them from marrying.</p>
<p>This marriage cannot be, do you hear? lt must--</p>
<p>And so Heathcliff and lsabella were married.</p>
<p>Many months later at Wuthering Heights...</p>
<p>during one of Dr. Kenneth's increasingly rare visits--</p>
<p>Why don't you hit yourself over the head with a hammer...</p>
<p>the instant you get up in the morning?</p>
<p>- Why? - lf you hit yourself hard enough...</p>
<p>you'll remain unconscious the whole day and achieve the same results...</p>
<p>you would from a whole gallon of spirits...</p>
<p>with much less wear and tear on the kidneys.</p>
<p>Don't you agree with me, Mrs. Heathcliff?</p>
<p>What does it matter?</p>
<p>Well, l'd hoped that it did matter...</p>
<p>that when you came here, things would change.</p>
<p>Only l changed.</p>
<p>l remember this house when it rang with laughter and love. Good-bye.</p>
<p>Ask your husband to call another doctor in future.</p>
<p>Whoever dwells in this house is beyond my healing arts.</p>
<p>l shall miss you, Dr. Kenneth.</p>
<p>l brought you into the world...</p>
<p>but it's a world you're not going to grace very long if you stay here.</p>
<p>Dear child, l must tell you this.</p>
<p>Go back where you belong, back with Edgar for a month or two.</p>
<p>lt would mean your salvation, and his.</p>
<p>Edgar's disowned me.</p>
<p>Nonsense. That was natural under the circumstances, but he needs you now.</p>
<p>He does. Why?</p>
<p>Cathy is gravely ill.</p>
<p>ln fact, it's only a matter of days.</p>
<p>Hours, perhaps.</p>
<p>What is it?</p>
<p>Fever. lnflammation of the lungs.</p>
<p>But there's something beyond that. l don't know. l'd call it a will to die.</p>
<p>lf Cathy died...</p>
<p>l might begin to live.</p>
<p>Begin to live, eh?</p>
<p>ln this house with Heathcliff, nothing can live.</p>
<p>Nothing but hate. lt's breathing like the devil's own breath on me.</p>
<p>And you, he hates you worse than he does me. He loathes you.</p>
<p>Each time you kiss him his heart breaks with rage because it's not Cathy.</p>
<p>- Kill him. - l forbade you to speak about him.</p>
<p>- Stop it, you hear me? - Kill him!</p>
<p>That's the first lucid talk l've heard out of Hindley for weeks.</p>
<p>lt's not very Christian talk, but it's coherent.</p>
<p>Seemed to make some points.</p>
<p>- l'm delighted with your improvement. - l tried to stop him.</p>
<p>Thank you, my dear wife. Your loyalty is touching.</p>
<p>Your curses will come home to feed on your own heart.</p>
<p>Every agony you've given will return.</p>
<p>Why do we have him here?</p>
<p>l can't breathe with him in the house.</p>
<p>Existence would be so much less without my boyhood friend under my roof.</p>
<p>Don't you see?</p>
<p>You poison yourself with hating him.</p>
<p>Darling, please send him away and let love come into the house.</p>
<p>Why isn't there the smell of heather in your hair?</p>
<p>Why won't you let me come near you?</p>
<p>You're not black and horrible as they all think. You're full of pain.</p>
<p>l can make you happy. Let me try. You won't regret it. l'll be your slave.</p>
<p>l can bring life back to you, new and fresh.</p>
<p>Why are your eyes always empty...</p>
<p>like Linton's eyes?</p>
<p>They're not empty.</p>
<p>lf you'd only look deeper.</p>
<p>Look at me.</p>
<p>l'm pretty.</p>
<p>l'm a woman, and l love you.</p>
<p>You're all of life to me.</p>
<p>Let me be a single breath of it for you.</p>
<p>Heathcliff, let your heart look at me just once.</p>
<p>Oh, why did God give me life?</p>
<p>What is it but hunger and pain?</p>
<p>What do you want, Ellen?</p>
<p>What are you doing here?</p>
<p>l want to speak to Miss lsabella.</p>
<p>You can do so in front of me.</p>
<p>Her brother has asked me to bring her home for a visit.</p>
<p>He needs you with him, Miss lsabella.</p>
<p>Why?</p>
<p>Let go of me, Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Cathy. She's ill.</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>Mr. Edgar wants you to come home at once, Miss lsabella.</p>
<p>She's dying.</p>
<p>You're not going. She belongs to Edgar if she's dying.</p>
<p>Let her die where she belongs, in Edgar's arms.</p>
<p>Let her die.</p>
<p>ls that better?</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>lsn't there a south wind?</p>
<p>lsn't the snow almost gone?</p>
<p>Quite gone down here, darling. Just a few patches left.</p>
<p>The sky is blue, and the larks are singing...</p>
<p>and the brooks are brimming full.</p>
<p>Will you get me something?</p>
<p>- What do you want, darling? - Some heather.</p>
<p>There's a beautiful patch near the castle.</p>
<p>l want some from there.</p>
<p>Near the castle? What castle, darling?</p>
<p>The castle on the moors, Edgar.</p>
<p>Go there, please.</p>
<p>There's no castle on the moors, darling.</p>
<p>There is.</p>
<p>lt's on the hill...</p>
<p>beyond Wuthering Heights.</p>
<p>- You mean Penistone Crag. - Yes.</p>
<p>l was a queen there once.</p>
<p>Go there, Edgar.</p>
<p>Get me some heather, please.</p>
<p>l'll go. You sleep while l'm gone, and rest so you'll be better tomorrow.</p>
<p>You've been very dear to me, Edgar.</p>
<p>- Very dear. - Sleep, darling.</p>
<p>Robert!</p>
<p>Get my horse ready. l'm going to Dr. Kenneth. Be quick.</p>
<p>Yes, sir.</p>
<p>Come here.</p>
<p>l was dreaming...</p>
<p>you might come before l died.</p>
<p>You might come and scowl at me once more.</p>
<p>Oh, Heathcliff...</p>
<p>how strong you look.</p>
<p>How many years do you mean to live after l'm gone?</p>
<p>Don't--</p>
<p>Don't let me go.</p>
<p>lf l could only hold you till we were both dead.</p>
<p>Will you forget me when l'm in the earth?</p>
<p>l could as soon forget you as my own life.</p>
<p>Cathy, if you die--</p>
<p>Poor Heathcliff. Come.</p>
<p>Let me feel how strong you are.</p>
<p>Strong enough to bring us both back to life, Cathy, if you want to live.</p>
<p>No, Heathcliff. l want to die.</p>
<p>Oh, Cathy.</p>
<p>Why did you kill yourself?</p>
<p>Hold me.</p>
<p>Just hold me.</p>
<p>No, l'll not comfort you.</p>
<p>My tears don't love you, Cathy. They blight and curse and damn you.</p>
<p>Heathcliff, don't break my heart.</p>
<p>Oh, Cathy, l never broke your heart. You broke it.</p>
<p>You loved me!</p>
<p>What right to throw love away for the poor fancy thing you felt for him?</p>
<p>For a handful of worldliness?</p>
<p>Misery, death and all the evils God and man could've handed down...</p>
<p>would never have parted us.</p>
<p>You did that alone. You wandered off...</p>
<p>like a wanton, greedy child...</p>
<p>to break your heart and mine.</p>
<p>Heathcliff, forgive me.</p>
<p>We have so little time.</p>
<p>Oh, Cathy.</p>
<p>Cathy, your wasted hands.</p>
<p>Kiss me again.</p>
<p>Heathcliff, he's coming. Mr. Linton. For heaven's sake, go! Only be quick!</p>
<p>lt's the last time.</p>
<p>l won't go, Cathy. l'm here.</p>
<p>l'll never leave you again.</p>
<p>l told you, Ellen, when he went away, that night in the rain--</p>
<p>l told you l belonged to him, that he was my life, my being.</p>
<p>Don't listen to her ravings.</p>
<p>lt's true.</p>
<p>l'm yours, Heathcliff. l've never been anyone else's.</p>
<p>She doesn't know what she's saying.</p>
<p>You can still get out. Go before they get here.</p>
<p>Take me to the window.</p>
<p>Let me look at the moors with you once more.</p>
<p>My darling. Once more.</p>
<p>How beautiful the day is.</p>
<p>Can you see the crag...</p>
<p>over there where our castle is?</p>
<p>l'll wait for you...</p>
<p>till you come.</p>
<p>Leave her alone.</p>
<p>She's mine.</p>
<p>She's mine now.</p>
<p>Miss Cathy.</p>
<p>Oh, my wild heart.</p>
<p>Miss Cathy.</p>
<p>She's gone.</p>
<p>You've done your last black deed, Heathcliff. Leave this house.</p>
<p>She's at peace, in heaven and beyond us.</p>
<p>What do they know of heaven or hell, Cathy...</p>
<p>who know nothing of life?</p>
<p>Oh, they're praying for you, Cathy.</p>
<p>l'll pray one prayer with them.</p>
<p>l repeat till my tongue stiffens:</p>
<p>Catherine Earnshaw, may you not rest so long as l live on.</p>
<p>l killed you.</p>
<p>Haunt me, then. Haunt your murderer.</p>
<p>l know that ghosts have wandered</p>
<p>Be with me always.</p>
<p>Take any form. Drive me mad.</p>
<p>Only do not leave me in this dark alone, where l cannot find you.</p>
<p>l cannot live without my life.</p>
<p>l cannot die without my soul.</p>
<p>Oh, Cathy.</p>
<p>Oh, my dear.</p>
<p>l can still see and hear that wild hour...</p>
<p>l can still see and hear that wild hour...</p>
<p>with poor Heathcliff trying to tear away the veil between death and life...</p>
<p>crying out to Cathy's soul...</p>
<p>to haunt him and torment him...</p>
<p>till he died.</p>
<p>You say that was Cathy's ghost l heard at the window?</p>
<p>Not her ghost...</p>
<p>but Cathy's love, stronger than time itself...</p>
<p>still sobbing for its unlived days...</p>
<p>and uneaten bread.</p>
<p>- What's the matter, man? - l've gone mad.</p>
<p>- Stark raving mad. - Dr. Kenneth.</p>
<p>l saw Heathcliff out in the moors in the snow with a woman.</p>
<p>- A woman, you say? - Yes, a woman.</p>
<p>l saw her with him plain as my own eyes.</p>
<p>lt was Cathy.</p>
<p>Go on, man. What happened?</p>
<p>No, l don't know who it was. l was trying to get up near to them...</p>
<p>when suddenly my horse reared and plunged, and l was thrown.</p>
<p>l called out to them, but they didn't hear me, so l followed them.</p>
<p>l tell you l saw them both!</p>
<p>He had his arm about her.</p>
<p>So l climbed up after them...</p>
<p>and l found him.</p>
<p>Only him-- alone--</p>
<p>with only his footprints in the snow.</p>
<p>Under a high rock on a ledge near Penistone Crag.</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>Was he dead?</p>
<p>No, not dead, Dr. Kenneth.</p>
<p>Not alone.</p>
<p>He's with her.</p>
<p>They've only just begun to live.</p>
<p>Good-bye, Heathcliff.</p>
<p>Good-bye, my wild, sweet Cathy.</p>
]]></description>
<pubDate>2009-06-12 00:22:39</pubDate>
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