Sunday, June 8, 2008

All lyrics are based around poems of Emily Bronte traditionally assumed to have been written between the earliest and last given dates of December 1836 and September 1846.





SCENE ONE

Refugee from the world of city society, Mr Lockwood, hires property, Thrushcross Grange, in a remote area of North Yorkshire England. His first visit [1] to his landlord Mr Heathcliff, the owner of a property called Wuthering Heights, is tense and he begins to have doubts about his decision to reside in such an isolated and unfriendly environment [2]

[ Voice over - Lockwood]
“I have just returned from a visit to my landlord"

1 [Lockwood]

I paused on the threshold
I turned to the sky
I looked to the heavens
And the dark mountains round

The full moon shone bright
Through that ocean on high
And the wind murmured past
With a wild eerie sound

And I entered the walls
Of my dark prison house
Mysterious it rose
From the billowy moor

2 [Lockwood]

Stern Reason is to judgement come
Arrayed in all the forms of gloom
Why did I cast the world away?

Why have I persevered to shun
The common paths that others run
And on a strange road journeyed on
Heedless alike of wealth and power
Of glory's wreath and pleasure's flower

Speak guide of choices distant and near
Tell why I have chosen here?

SCENE TWO

The next day a return visit by Lockwood to Wuthering Heights results in a forced overnight stay due to bad weather conditions. Lockwood is smuggled into an unused room by the cook, Zillah. He has a series of disturbed dreams seemingly connected with the houses history [3] and is terrified by the ghostly appearance of a female child, Catherine the daughter of the original owner of the property [4]. The ghost seems to be searching for someone it was connected with in life [5]. The landlord,is highly agitated on hearing of the apparition and cries out to it [6].                                                                                                                                                                                 
[Voice over - Lockwood]

“While leading the way upstairs she recommended that I should hide the candle and not make a noise, for her master had an odd notion about the chamber she would put me in and would never let anyone lodge there willingly.”   

3 [Lockwood]

All hushed and still within the house
Without all wind and storm lashed moors
But something whispers to my mind
Through snow and storm and wailing wind
Never again!
Never again!
Why? not again
Memory has power as real as yours

[Voice over - Lockwood]
"My fingers closed on the fingers of a little ice cold hand"

[Voice over - Catherine]
"Let me in let me in.. It is twenty years I've been a waif for twenty years"

4 [Lockwood]

What woke ?
A little child strayed from its father's cottage door
And in the hour of moonlight
Lay lonely on the desert moor
I heard it - a shriek of misery
That wild, wild music wailed to me

5 Catherine

I did not sleep… I did not dream…
The soul is free to leave its clay a little while
The mortal flesh you might debar
But not the eternal fire within

A heart that can forget him never
Though shut within a sighing tomb
His name shall be for whom I bear
This long sustained and hopeless doom

And brighter in the hour of woe
Than in the blaze of victory's pride
That glory shedding star shall glow
For which we fought and bled and died

[Voice over - Heathcliff]
"Come in ! come in! Cathy, do come - Oh do. Once more.
 Oh! My hearts darling! Hear me this time, Catherine, at last!"

6 [Heathcliff]

If grief for grief can touch thee
If answering woe for woe
If any ruth can melt thee
Come to me now

I cannot be more lonely
More drear I cannot be
My worn heart throbs so wildly
'Twill break for thee 

And when the world despises
When heaven repels my prayer
Will not my angel comfort?
Mine idol hear? 

Yes by the tears I've poured
By all my hours of pain
Oh I will surely win thee
Beloved, again

SCENE THREE

The next night Lockwood’s housekeeper at Thrushcross Grange, Nelly Dean, an ex servant of the Heights when it was owned by the Earnshaw family, agrees to tell him the history of its residents. [7].

It seems that 20 years before, the original owner of the property, Mr Earnshaw, while on a visit to Liverpool, felt pity for a street urchin [8] and brought him home, much to the displeasure of his own children, Catherine and Hindley. Catherine, however, became fond of the newcomer now called Heathcliff. After Hindley was sent away to college for three years, the friendship between the two high spirited children strengthened.

Following the death of his father, Hindley returned home for the funeral with a wife, Francis. He settled in to manage the property but regularly maltreated Heathcliff. The only solace the boy had was comforting from Catherine [9][10].

[Voice over - Lockwood]
"Do you know anything of his history?"

[Voice over - Nelly]
"It is a cuckoo's sir. I know all about it except
 where he was born and who were his parents."..

7 [Nelly]

Well narrow draw the circle round
And hush that music's solemn sound
And quench the lamp and stir the fire
To raise its flickering radiance higher

Loop up the window's velvet veil
That we may hear the night-wind wail
For wild those gusts and well their chimes
Blend with a song of troubled times

[Voice over - Nelly] 
"All I could make out was a tale of his seeing it starving 
 and homeless and as good as dumb in the streets of Liverpool".

8 [Earnshaw]

Heavy hangs the raindrop
From the burdened spray
Heavy broods the damp mist
On uplands far away

Heavy looms the dull sky
Heavy rolls the sea
And heavy beats the young heart
Beneath that lonely tree

Never has a blue streak
Cleft the clouds since morn
Never has his grim fate
Smiled since he was born

Frowning on the infant,
Shadowing childhood's joy
Guardian angel knows not
That melancholy boy

Day is passing swiftly
Its sad and sombre prime
Youth is fast invading
Sterner manhood's' time

All the flowers are praying
For sun before they close
And he prays too unknowing
That sunless human rose

Blossoms that the west-wind
Has never wooed to blow
Scentless are thy petals
Your dew as cold as snow

Soul, where kindred kindness
No early promise woke
Barren is your beauty
As weed upon the rock

Wither Soul and blossom
Your life was vainly given
Earth reserves no blessing
For the unblessed of heaven


[Voice over - Nelly] 

"She was much too fond of Heathcliff

9 [Catherine]


I'll come when thou art saddest

Laid alone in the darkened room;
When the mad day's mirth has vanished
And the smile of joy is banished
From evening's chilly gloom.


I'll come when the heart's real feeling
Has entire unbiased sway,
And my influence o'er thee stealing,
Grief deepening, joy congealing,
Shall bear thy soul away.


Listen, 'tis just the hour,
The awful time for thee;
Dost thou not feel upon thy soul
A flood of strange sensations roll,
Forerunners of a sterner power,
Heralds of me 


10 [Heathcliff]


Child of delight
What brings you here
Beneath these sullen skies?


[Catherine]

I saw and pitied mournful boy
And I swore to take your gloomy sadness
And give to you my sunny joy


Heavy and dark the night is closing
Heavy and dark may its biding be
Better for all from grief reposing
And better for all who watch like me


Guardian angel you lack no longer
Evil fortune you need not fear
Fate is strong, but love is stronger
And more unsleeping then angel care


SCENE FOUR


One day, a sneak visit to the neighbouring Thrushcross Grange property by Catherine and Heathcliff results in an attack by a watchdog. Heathcliff is told to go home. Catherine is taken in by Mrs Linton, the wife of the owner, and quickly adapts to the lifestyle and well bred manners of the children of the house, Edgar and Isabella [11]. When Catherine’s stay extends to five weeks. Heathcliff resents her apparent change of attitude towards him [12]

[Voice over - Nelly] 

"Where is Miss Catherine?" "No accident I hope?"

[Voice over - Heathcliff
"At Thrushcross Grange, and I would have been there too 
 but they had not the manners to ask me to stay".

11[Mrs Linton]

Awaking morning laughs from heaven
On golden summer's forests green;
And what a gush of song is given
To welcome in that light serene.

A fresh wind waves the clustering roses,
And through the open window sighs
Around the couch where she reposes,
The lady with the dove like eyes;

With dove like eyes and shining hair,
And velvet cheek so sweetly molded;
And hands so soft and white and fair
Above her snowy bosom folded.

Her sister's and her brother's feet
Are brushing off the scented dew,
And she springs up in haste to greet
The grass and flowers and sunshine too

12 [Heathcliff]

Lady in your palace hall
Once perchance my face was seen
Can no memory now recall
Thought again to what has been?

SCENE FIVE

The following year, some weeks after giving birth to their son, Hareton, Hindley’s wife, Francis, dies and he begins drinking heavily. When Heathcliff later overhears Catherine talking to Nelly about marriage to Edgar Linton he is angry at Catherines apparent rejection of him [13] and runs away to improve his social position [14] and prove his love for her [15]. Catherine is deeply regretful when she realizes Heathcliff has left because of her dismissive words about him [16].

[Voice over - Catherine] 

 "I've no more business to marry Edgar Linton 
 then to be in heaven. And if the wicked man in there 
 had not brought Heathcliff so low, I shouldn't have thought of it. 
 It would degrade me to marry Heathcliff now 
 so he shall never know how much I love him".

13 [Catherine]

On a sunny brae alone I lay
One summer afternoon
It was the marriage time of May
With her young lover June

The trees did wave their plumy crests
The glad birds carolled clear
And I, of all the wedding guests
Was only sullen there

There was not one but wished to shun
My aspect void of cheer
And I could utter no reply
Why I had brought a clouded eye
To greet the general glow

So resting on a heathy bank
I took my heart to me
And we together sadly sank
Into a reverie

We thought when winter comes again
Where will these bright things be?
All vanished like a vision vain
An unreal mockery

The birds that now so blithely sing
Through deserts frozen dry
Poor spectres of the perished spring
In famished troops will fly

And why should we be glad at all
The leaf is hardly green
Before a token of its fall
Is on the surface seen

Now whether it were really so
I never could be sure
But as in fit of peevish woe
I stretched me on the moor

A thousand, thousand gleaming fires
Seemed kindling in the air
A thousand, thousand silvery lyres
Resounded far and near

Methought the very breath I breathed
Was full of sparks divine
And all my heather couch was wreathed
By that celestial shine

And, while the wide earth echoing rung
To their strange minstrelsy
The little glittering spirits sung
Or seemed to sing to me

[Dying memories]

Oh mortal ! Mortal ! let them die
Let time and tears destroy
That we may overflow the sky
With universal joy

Let grief distract the sufferer’s breast
And night obscure his way
They hasten him to endless rest
And everlasting day

To thee the world is like a tomb
A desert's naked shore
To us in unimagined bloom
It brightens more and more

And could we lift the veil and give
One brief glimpse to thine eye
Thou wouldst rejoice for those that live
Because they live to die

The music ceased the noonday dream
Like dream of night withdrew
But fancy still will sometimes deem
Her fond creation true

14 [Heathcliff]

Light up the halls tis closing day
I'm drear and lone and far away
Cold blows on my breast the north winds bitter sigh
And oh, my couch is bleak beneath the rainy sky

Light up the halls and think not of me
That face is absent now thou hast hated so to see
Bright be thine eyes undimmed their dazzling shine
For never, never more will they encounter mine

The desert moor is dark there is tempest in the air
I have breathed my only wish in one last one burning prayer
A prayer that would come forth although it lingered long
That set on fire my heart but died upon my tongue

Oh could I see thy lids weighed down in cheerless woe
Too full to hide the tears too stern to overflow
Oh could I know thy soul with equal grief was torn
This fate might be endured this anguish might be borne

I do not need a breath to cool my death-cold brow
But go to that far land where she is shining now
Tell her my latest wish tell her my dreary doom
Say my pangs are past but hers are yet to come

Vain words vain frenzied thoughts No ear can hear my call
Lost in the vacant air my frantic curses fall
And could she see me now perchance her lip would smile
Would smile in careless pride and utter scorn the while!

And yet for all her hate each parting glance would tell
A stronger passion breathed burned in this last farewell
Unconquered in my soul the tyrant rules me still
Life bows to my control but love I cannot kill!

15 [Heathcliff]

Now trusts a heart that trusts in you
And firmly say the word adieu
Be sure wherever I may roam
My heart is with your heart at home

And whiter brows then yours may be
And rosier cheeks my eyes may see
And lightning looks from orbs divine
Around my pathway burn and shine

But that pure light changeless and strong
Cherished and watched and nursed so long
That love that first its glory gave
Shall be my pole star to the grave

16. [Catherine]

I would have touched the heavenly key
That spoke alike of bliss and thee
I would have woke the entrancing song
But its words died upon my tongue
And then I knew that hallowed strain
Would never speak of joy again
And then I felt.....

SCENE SIX

Catherine becomes depressed about Heathcliff’s absence.[17] Gradually accepting her loss [18] [19] she goes ahead with her plans for marriage to Edgar now owner of Thrushcross Grange following his parents death from fever. She tries to forget Heathcliff and adjust to her new life in privileged society [20]

17 [Catherine]

From our evening fireside now
Merry laugh and cheerful tone
Smiling eye and cloudless brow
Mirth and music all are flown

Yet the grass before the door
Grows as green in April rain
And as blithely as of yore
Larks have poured their day-long strain

Is it fear or is it sorrow
Checks the stagnant stream of joy?
Do we tremble that tomorrow
May some future peace destroy?

One is absent, and for one
Cheerless chill is our hearthstone
One is absent and for him
Cheeks are pale and eyes are dim

The joy of life has flown
He is gone and we are lone
So it is by morn and eve
So it is in field and hall

For the absent one we grieve
One being absent saddens all

18 [Catherine]

Why do I hate that lone green dell?
Buried in moors and mountains wild
That is a spot I had loved too well
Had I but seen it when a child

The earth shone round with a long lost charm
Alas I forgot I was not the same
Before a day an hour passed by
My spirit knew itself once more

I saw the gilded vapours fly
And leave me as I was before

19 [Catherine]

There should be no despair for you
While nightly stars are burning
While evening pours its silent dew
And sunshine gilds the morning

There should be no despair though tears
May flow down like a river
Are not the best beloved of years
Around your heart forever?

They weep you weep it must be so
Winds sigh as you are sighing
And winter sheds its grief in snow
When autumn leaves are lying

Yet these revive and from their fate
Your fate cannot be parted
Then journey on if not elate
Then never broken-hearted!

20 [Catherine]

Here with my knee upon thy stone
I bid adieu to feelings gone
I leave with thee my tears and pain
And rush into the world again

SCENE SEVEN

Three years after his departure Heathcliff returns [21] much to Edgar's annoyance, Catherine’s joy and Nellys affection. The depth of the two friend’s regard for each other is obvious [22] but the harmony does not last. Following an angry dispute between Catherine and Edgar over Heathcliff’s continued presence, Catherine becomes delirious.When it is discovered that Heathcliff has eloped with Isabella [23] Catherine suffers a brain fever [24] which is later recognized as an early symptom of pregnancy. After two months of devoted nursing by Edgar, she recovers. [25]

Isabella returns to Wuthering Heights married to Heathcliff and is treated badly by him. Heathcliff sneaks a meeting with Catherine who has become morose and fatalistic about her condition [26]. Catherine dies shortly after the premature birth of a daughter, also called Catherine [27]. Heathcliff is distraught at Catherine’s death and begs her ghost to haunt him and never leave him alone again [28]

21 [Catherine]

Fair sinks the summer evening now
In softened glory round my home
The sky upon its holy brow
Wears not a cloud that speaks of gloom

The old tower shrined in golden light
Looks down on the descending sun
So gently evening blends with night
You scarce could say that day is done

And this is just the joyous hour
When we were wont to burst away
To 'scape from labour's tyrant power
And cheerfully go out to play

Then why is all so sad and lone?
No merry footstep on the stair
No laugh no heart awaking tone
But voiceless silence everywhere

I've wandered round our garden ground
And still it seemed at every turn
That I should greet approaching feet
And words upon the breezes borne

In vain they will not come today
And mornings beams will rise as drear
But tell me are they gone for aye?
Our sun blinks through the mists of care

Ah no reproving Hope doth say
Departed joys twas fond to mourn
When every storm that hides their ray
Prepares a more divine return

[Voice over - Catherine] 
"Oh Edgar Edgar ... Heathcliff's come back - he has!"

22 [Nelly]

Companions all day long they've stood
The wild winds restless blowing
All day they'vd watched the darkened flood
Around their vessel flowing

Sunshine has never smiled since morn
And clouds have gathered drear
And heavier hearts would feel forlorn
And weaker minds would fear

But look in each young shipmate's eyes
Lit by the evening flame
And see how little stormy skies
Their joyous blood can tame

It is the hour of dreaming now
The red fire brightly gleams
And sweetest in a red fire's glow
The hour of dreaming seems

I may not trace the thoughts of all
But some I read as well
As I can hear the ocean's fall
And sullen surging swell

And one is there, I know the voice
The thrilling stirring tone
That makes the bounding pulse rejoice
Yet makes not mine alone

[Anonymous Voice over] 
 "She's gone, she's gone!
 Yon' Heathcliff's run off wi' her!"

23 [Isabella]

Silent is the house
All are laid asleep
One alone looks out
O'er the snow wreaths deep

Watching every cloud
Dreading every breeze
That whirls the wildering drifts
And bends the groaning trees

Cheerful is the hearth
Soft the matted floor
Not one shivering gust
Creeps through pane and door

The little lamp burns straight
Its rays shoot strong and far
I trim it well to be
The wanderers guiding star

Frown my haughty sire
Chide my angry dame
Set your slaves to spy
Threaten me with shame

But neither sire nor dame
Nor prying serf shall know
What angel nightly tracks
That waste of winter snow

What I love shall come
Like messenger of air
Safe in secret power
From lurking human snare

Who loves me no word of mine
Shall o'er betray
Though for faith unstained
My life must forfeit pay

Burn then little lamp
Glimmer straight and clear
Hush a rusting wind stirs
Me thinks the air

He for whom I wait
Thus ever comes to me
Strange power I trust your might
Trust thou my constancy

24 [Catherine]

Enough of thought philosopher
Too long as thou been dreaming
Unenlightened, in this chamber drear
While summers sun is beaming
Space sweeping soul, what sad refrain
Concludes thy musing once again?

Oh for the time when I shall sleep
Without identity
And never care how rain may steep
Or snow may cover me!
No promised heaven, these wild desires
Could all or half fulfil?
No threatened hell with quenchless fires
Subdue this quenchless will!

So said I and still say the same
Still to my death will say
Three gods within this little frame
Are warring night and day

Heaven could not hold them all and yet
They all are held in me
And must be mine till I forget
My present entity

Oh for the time when in my breast
Their struggles will be o'er
Oh for the day, when I shall rest
And never suffer more!

I saw a spirit, standing man
Where thou doth stand an hour ago
And round his feet three rivers ran
Of equal depth and equal flow

A golden stream and one like blood
And one like sapphire seemed to be
But where they joined their triple flood
It tumbled in an inky sea

The spirit sent his dazzling gaze
Down through that oceans gloomy night
Then kindling all with sudden blaze
The glad deep sparkled wide and bright
White as the sun far far more fair
Then its divided sources were

And even for that spirit, seer
I watched and sought my life-time long
Sought him in heaven, hell, earth and air
An endless search and always wrong!

Had I but seen his glorious eye
Once light the clouds that wilder me
I ne're had raised this coward cry
To cease to think and cease to be

I ne'er had called oblivion blest
Nor, stretching eager hands to death
Implored to change for senseless rest
This sentient soul this living breath

Oh let me die that power and will
Their cruel strife may close
And conquered good and conquering ill
Be lost in one repose

25 [Catherine]

The night of storms has passed
The sunshine bright and clear
Gives glory to the verdant waste
And warms the breezy air

And I would leave my bed
Its cheering smile to see
To chase the visions from my head
Whose forms have troubled me

In all the hours of gloom
My soul was rapt away
I dreamt I stood by a marble tomb
Where royal corpses lay

It was just the time of eve
When parted ghosts might come
Above their prisoned dust to grieve
And wail their woeful doom

And truly at my side
I saw a shadowy thing
Most dim and yet its presence there
Curdled my blood with ghastly fear
And ghastlier wondering

My breath I could not draw
The air seemed uncanny
And still my eyes with maddening gaze
Were fixed upon its fearful face
And its were fixed on me

I fell down on the stone
But could not turn away
My words died in a voiceless moan
When I began to pray

And still it bent above
Its features full in view
It seemed close by and yet more far
Then this world from the farthest star
That tracks the boundless blue

Indeed 'twas not the space
Of earth or time between
But the sea of death's eternity
The gulf o'er which mortality
Has never never been

O bring not back again
The horror of that hour
When its lips opened
And a sound
Awoke the stillness reigning round

Faint as a dream but the earth shrank
And Heavens lights shivered
'Neath its power

26 [Catherine]

I see around me tombstones grey
Stretching their shadow far away
Beneath the turf my footsteps tread
Lie lone and lone the silent dead

Beneath the turf beneath the mould
Forever dark forever cold
And my eyes cannot hold the tears
That memory hoards from vanished years

For time and death and mortal pain
Give wounds that will not heal again
Let me remember half the woe
I've seen and heard and felt below
And heaven itself so pure and blest
Could never give my spirit rest

Sweet land of light thy children fair
Know naught akin to our despair
Nor have they felt nor can they tell
What tenants haunt each mortal cell
What gloomy guests we hold within
Torments and madness tears and sin

Well may they live in ecstasy
Their long eternity of joy
At least we would not bring them down
With us to weep with us to groan

No - Earth would wish no other sphere
To taste her cup of sufferings drear
She turns from heaven a careless eye
And only mourns that we must die

Ah mother what shall comfort thee
In all this boundless misery?
To cheer our eager eyes a while
We see thee smile how fondly smile
But who reads through that tender glow
Thy deep, unutterable woe!
Indeed no dazzling land above
Can cheat thee of thy children's love

We all in life's departing shine
Our last dear longings blend with thine
And struggle still and strive to trace
With clouded gaze thy darling face

We would not leave our native home
For any world beyond the tomb
No rather on thy kindly breast
Let us be laid in lasting rest
Or waken but to share with thee
A mutual immortality

[Voice over - Catherine] 
"I shall not be at peace.
I'm not wishing you greater torment then I have Heathcliff.
I only wish us never to be parted".

27 [Catherine]

Thou standest in the greenwoods now
The place the hour the same
And here the fresh leaves gleam and glow
And there down in the lake below
The tiny ripples flame
But where is he today today?
O question not with me
I will not Lady only say
Where may thy lover be?

Is he upon some distant shore?
Or is he on the sea?
Or is the heart thou dost adore
A faithless heart to thee?

The heart I love what're betide
Is faithful as the grave
And neither foreign lands divide
Nor yet the rolling wave

Then why should sorrow cloud that brow
And tears those eyes bedim?
Reply this once is it that thou
Has faithless been to him?

I gazed upon the cloudless moon
And loved her all the night
Till morning came and ardent
noon
Then I forgot her light

No not forgot eternally
Remains its memory dear
But could the day seem dark to me
Because the night was fair?

I well may mourn that only one
Can light my future sky
Even though by such a radiant sky
My moon of life must die

[Voice over - Heathcliff] 

"Be with me always - take any form - Drive me mad. 
 Only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you."

28 [Heathcliff]

The wind was rough which tore
The leaf from its parent tree
The fate was cruel which bore
The withering corpse to me

SCENE EIGHT

After Catherine’s death, Heathcliff’s contempt for Isabella becomes obvious and she runs away from him and moves to South London where she gives birth, two months later to a son, Linton, whom she raises on her own. Two years later Isabella dies, betrayed by Heathcliff's false affection for her, deserted by family, friends and society and longing for the familiar sights and sounds of her birth place [29]. Edgar's grief over Catherine's death turns him into a recluse and he takes to long isolated walks at night over the moor lands [30]

Six months after Isabella's death, Hindley dies, an alcoholic. Hindley’s estate and son now under the legal control of Heathcliff. Hindley's death is mourned only by Nelly who knew him from childhood. [31] Catherine's child, Cathy, meanwhile was being raised by her father Edgar and Nelly in relative peace at the Grange.

[Voice over- Nelly] 
"I believe her new abode was in the south near London
 there she had a son. 
 [She] died when Linton was twelve or a little more".

29 [Isabella]

The linnet in the rocky dells
The moor lark in the air
The bee among the heather bells
That hide a lady fair

The wild deer browse above her breast
The wild birds raise their brood
And they, her smiles of love caressed
Have left her solitude

I ween that when the graves dark wall
Did first her form retain
They thought their hearts could ne'er recall
The light of joy again

They thought the tide of grief would flow
Unchecked through future years
But where is all their anguish now
And where are all their tears

Well let them fight for honours breath
Or pleasures shade pursue
The dweller in the land of death
Is changed and careless too

And if their eyes should watch and weep
Till sorrows source were dry
She would not in her tranquil sleep
Return a single sigh

Blow west-wind, by the lonely mound
And murmur summer streams
There is no need of other sound
To soothe a lady's dreams

[Voice over - Nelly] 
"Grief transformed him into a complete hermit. 
 He spent a life of entire seclusion within the limits of his park
 and grounds, only varied by solitary rambles on the moors"

30 [Edgar]

How clear she shines!
How quietly I lie beneath her guardian light
While Heaven and Earth are whispering me
"Tomorrow wake, but dream tonight."

While gazing on the stars that glow
Above me in that stormless sea
I long to hope that all the woe
Creation knows is held in thee!

And this shall be my dream tonight
I'll think the heaven of glorious spheres
Is rolling on its course of light
In endless bliss, through endless years.

I'll think there's not one world above
Far as these straining eyes can see
Where wisdom ever laughed at Love
Or Virtue crouched to Infamy

Where pleasure still will lead to wrong
And helpless reason warn in vain
And truth is weak, and treachery strong
And joy the shortest path to pain

And peace the lethargy of grief
And hope a phantom of the soul
And life a labour void and brief
And death the despot of the whole

[Voice over - Nelly] 
"I confess this blow was greater to me
  then the shock of Mrs Linton's death. 
 Ancient associations lingered round my heart. 
 I sat down on the porch and wept as for a blood relation"

31 [Nelly]

How few of all the hearts
Are grieving for thee now
And why should mine tonight be moved
With such a sense of woe

Too often thus when left alone
Where none my thoughts can see
Comes back a word a passing tone
From thy strange history

Sometimes I seem to see thee rise
A glorious child again.......

O fairly spread thy earthly sail
And fresh and pure and free
Was the first impulse of the gale
That urged life's wave for thee

Why did the pilot too confiding
Dream o'er that oceans foam
And trust in pleasures careless guiding
To bring his vessel home?

For well he knew what dangers frowned
What mists would gather dim
What rocks and shelves and sands lay round
Between his port and him

The very brightness of the sun
The splendor of the main
The wind that bore him wildly on
Should not have warned in vain

An anxious gazer from the shore
I marked the whitening wave
And wept the more
Because I could not save

It reeks not now when all is over
And yet my heart will be
A mourner still though friend and lover
Have both forgotten thee

SCENE NINE

On her sixteenth birth Cathy is taken to see her cousin Linton. A smuggled correspondence between the two children is carried on until stopped by Nelly, fearful of the possible consequences if it was discovered. Several months later Heathcliff tells Cathy that Linton is very sick and wants to see her again. The resulting visit is continued every evening for three weeks without her fathers knowledge [32]. When it become apparent Linton is failing, Heathcliff tricks Cathy and Nelly into visiting the Heights then holds them capture for four days while making preparation for a forced marriage between the two children so gaining legal control of both estates.

Cathy, now Mrs Linton, escapes however, arriving at the bedside of her dying father, Edgar who is looking forward to being reunited with his beloved Catherine. He dies peacefully at three in the morning.[33] Cathy stays beside his bed until noon the next day.

After Edgar's funeral Heathcliff tells Nelly Linton and Cathy that he is going to rent out the Grange and all three must return with him to Wuthering Heights A little later he reveals to Nelly that, the day before, following the graveside ceremony, he had opened Catherine's coffin just to see her face again and had felt a strange sense of tranquility and belonging. [34].

Linton dies willing all his entitlements to his father leaving Cathy totally dependent on Heathcliff. During this time the first signs of an emerging friendship between Cathy and Hareton are noticed by Nelly. Lockwood informs Heathcliff that he is returning to city life.

32 [Linton]

O transient voyager of heaven
O silent sign of winter skies
What adverse wind thy sail has driven
To dungeons where a prisoner lies?

[Cathy]

Methinks the hand that shut the sun
So sternly from this mourning brow
Might still their rebel task have done?
And checked a thing so frail as thou

[Linton]

They would have done it
Had they known
The talisman that dwelt in thee
For all the suns that ever shone
Have never been so kind to me

For many a week, and many a day
My heart was weighed with sinking gloom
When morning rose in mourning grey
And faintly lit my prison room

But angel like, when I awoke
Thy silvery form so soft and fair
Shining through darkness, sweetly spoke
Of cloudy skies and mountains bare

Thy presence waked a thrilling tone
That comforts me while thou art here
And will sustain when thou art gone

[Voice over - Edgar] 
I'm going to her and you, darling child, shall come to us".

33 [Edgar]

I'm happiest when most away
I can bear my soul from its home of clay
On a windy night when the moon is bright
And my eye can wander though worlds of light

When I am not and none beside
Nor earth nor sea nor cloudless sky
But only spirit wandering wide
Through infinite immensity.

[Voice over - Heathcliff] 
"I'll tell you what I did yesterday. I got the sexton to remove the earth
  off her coffin lid and I opened it."

34 [Heathcliff]

Cold in the earth and the deep snow piled above 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?

Cold in the earth, and eighteen wild Decembers
From those brown hills have melted into spring
Faithful indeed is the spirit that remembers
After such years of change and suffering

Sweet love of youth, forgive, if I forget thee
While the World's tide is bearing me along;
Other desires and other hopes beset me
Hopes which obscure but cannot do thee wrong

No later light has lightened up my heaven;
No second morn has ever shone for me;
All my life's bliss from thy dear life was given
All my life's bliss is in the grave with thee.

But ,when the days of golden dreams had perished
And even despair was powerless to destroy
Then did I learn how existence could be cherished
Strengthened and fed without the aid of joy

Then did I check the tears of useless passion,
Weaned my young soul from yearning after thine
Sternly denied its burning wish to hasten
Down to that tomb already more then mine

And even yet, I dare not let it languish
Dare not indulge in Memory's rapturous pain;
Once drinking deep of that divinest anguish,
How could I seek the empty world again?

SCENE TEN

Late the following year Lockwood returns to the area and is surprised to find Cathy affectionately teaching Hareton how to read. The pairs growing alliance with each other angers Heathcliff but their physical reminders of Catherine disturb him and he grows uneasy in their presence. He starts experiencing nightmares of his violent past [35] and abandons plans to destroy them.

Heathcliff’s character becomes increasingly introverted and detached from the world he has created around himself. His awareness of the presence of Catherine's ghost intensifies and all he longs for is reunion with her. [36] Nelly realizes that his passing is imminent. [37]

Heathcliff's death brings a life of struggle, anger and turmoil to a close [38][39] [40] The only person to mourn him is Hareton who sees Heathcliff as much a victim as the people he has hurt. [41] Cathy supports Hareton as he adjusts to a life free of Heathcliff’s ridicule and harsh rejection [42].

35 [Heathcliff]

Why ask to know the date the clime?
More then mere words they cannot be
Men knelt to God and worshipped crime
That crushed all childhood sanctuary

I grew hard and learnt to wear
An iron front to futile prayer
I learnt to turn my ears away
From tortured groans as well as they

Yet there were faces that could bring
A moment's flash of human love
And there were fates that made me feel
I was not to the centre steel

Strange proofs I've seen how hearts could hide
Their secret with a lifelong pride
And then reveal as they died
A child they kept alive

Weary with the weeks of woe
One moonless night I let her go

[Voice over - Heathcliff]
"Nelly, there is a strange change approaching.
 I'm in its shadow at present".

36 [Heathcliff]

Ah why because the dazzling sun
Restored my earth to joy
Have you departed every one
And left a desert sky?

All through the night your glorious eyes
Were gazing down in mine
And with a full hearts thankful sighs
I blessed that watch divine

I was at peace, and drank your beams
As they were life to me
And revelled in my changeful dreams
Like petrel on the sea

Thought followed thought, star followed star
Through boundless regions on
While one sweet influence near and far
Thrilled through, and proved us one

Why did the morning dawn to break
So great so pure a spell
And scorch with fire, the tranquil cheek
Where your cool radiance fell?

My lids closed down yet through their veil
I saw him blazing still
And steep in gold the misty dale
And flash upon the hill

I turned me to the pillow then
To call back night and see
Your worlds of solemn light again
Throb with my heart, and me

It would not do the pillow glowed
And glowed both roof and floor
And birds sang loudly in the wood
And fresh winds shook the door

The curtains waved , the wakened flies
Were murmuring round my room
Imprisoned there, till I should rise
And give them leave to roam

Oh, stars, and dreams and gentle night
Oh night and stars return
And hide me from the hostile light
That does not warm, but burn

That drains the blood of suffering men
Drinks tears, instead of dew
Let me sleep through his blinding reign
And only wake with you

37 [Nelly]

The battle had passed from the height
And still did evening fall
While evening with its hosts of night
Gloriously canopied all

The dead around were sleeping
On heath and granite grey
And the dying their last watch were keeping
In the closing of the day

38 [Nelly]

It was the end of day
That saw his spirits flight
He parted in a time of awe

A winter night 

39 [Heathcliff]

Aye there it is
It wakes tonight
Sweet thoughts that will not die
And feeling's fires flash all as bright
As in the years gone by

Yes you can tell by my altered cheek
And by my kindled gaze
And by the words I scarce dost speak
How wildly fancy plays

Yes I could swear that glorious wind
Has swept the world aside
Has dashed its memory from my mind
Like foam bells from the tide

And thou art now a spirit pouring
Thy presence into all
The essence of the Tempest's roaring
And of the Tempest's fall

A universal influence
From my own influence free
A principle of life intense
Lost to mortality

Thus truly when the breast is cold
My prisoned soul shall rise
The dungeon mingle with the mould
The captive with the skies

40 [Heathcliff]

High waving heather,'neath stormy blasts bending
Midnight and moonlight and bright shining stars
Darkness and glory rejoicingly blending
Earth rising to heaven and heaven descending
Man's spirit away from its drear dungeon sending
Bursting the fetters and breaking the bars

All down the mountain sides wild forests lending
One mighty voice to the life giving wind
Rivers their banks in the jubilee rending
Fast through the valleys a reckless course wending
Wider and deeper their waters extending
Leaving a desolate desert behind

Shining and lowering and swelling and dying
Changing forever from midnight to noon
Roaring like thunder like soft music sighing
Shadows on shadows advancing and flying
Lightning-bright flashes the deep gloom defying
Coming as swiftly and fading as soon.

[Voice over - Nelly] 
"Poor Hareton, the most wronged, was the only one 
 that suffered much and bemoaned him with that strong grief 
 that comes from a generous heart".

41 [Hareton]

Well some may hate and some may scorn
And some may quite forget thy name
But my sad heart must ever mourn
Thy ruined hopes, thy blighted fame

Twas thus I thought an hour ago
Even weeping in wretched woe
One word turned back my gushing tears
And lit my altered eye with sneers

Then bless the friendly dust I said
That hides thy unlamented head!
Vain as thou wert, and weak as vain
The slave of falsehood, pride and pain

My heart has nought akin to thine
Thy soul is powerless over mine
But these were thoughts that vanished too
Unwise, unholy, and untrue

Do I despise the timid deer
Because his limbs are fleet with fear?
Or would I mock the wolf's death howl
Because his form is gaunt and foul?
Or hear with joy, the leverets cry
Because it cannot bravely die?

No!

Then above his memory
Let Pity's heart as tender be
Say 'Earth lie lightly on that breast
And, kind Heaven, grant that spirit rest!

42 [Hareton]

And first an hour of mournful musing
And then a gush of bitter tears
And then a dreary calm diffusing
Its deadly mist o'er joys and cares

And then a throb and then a lightening
And then a breathing from above
And then a star in heaven brightening
The star the glorious star of love

SCENE ELEVEN

Gradually Hareton recovers from his sadness and realizes that in Cathy he has a true friend [43][44][45] Over time various village tales tell of sightings of the ghosts of Heathcliff and Catherine on the moors [46]. Free of the negative influence of Heathcliff, Hareton and Cathy can look to the future with hope As he departs for the city Lockwood realises how much his exposure to the atmosphere and story of Heathcliff and Catherine has affected his attitude to the world [47] Hareton and Cathy grow in spiritual strength and confidence.  [48]. Nelly spends many evenings listening to the wind on the moors and remembering all the people and events she had witnessed during her life. [49]

43 [Cathy]

Cold clear and blue the morning heaven
Expands its arch on high;
Cold, clear, and blue the still lake water
Reflects that winter sky.
The moon has set, but Venus shines
A silent silvery star.

44 [Hareton]

All day I've toiled but not with pain
In learning's golden mine
And now at eventide again
The moonbeams softly shine

[Cathy]

There is no snow upon the ground
No frost on wind or wave
The south wind blew with gentlest sound
And broke their icy grave

[Cathy / Hareton]

Tis sweet to wander here at night
To watch the winter die
With heart as summer sunshine light
And warm as summer's sky

O may I never lose the peace
That lulls me gently now
Through time should change my youthful face
And years may shade my brow

True to myself and true to all
May I be helpful still
And turn away from passion's call
And curb my own wild will

45 [Hareton]

When days of beauty deck the earth
Or stormy nights descend
How well my spirit knows the path
On which it ought to wend

It seeks the consecrated spot
Beloved in childhood's years
The space between is all forgot
Its sufferings and its tears

[Voice over - Nelly] 
"What's the matter, my little man?

[Voice over - Shepherd Boy] 
"There's Heathcliff and a woman, yonder, under t' nab".

46 [Heathcliff]

The night was dark yet winter breathed
With softened sighs on heavens shore
And though its wind repining grieved
It chained the snow swollen streams no more

How deep into the wilderness
My horse had strayed I cannot say
But neither morsel nor caress
Would urge him further on the way

So loosening from his neck the rein
I set my worn companion free
And billowy hill and boundless plain
Full soon departed him from me

The sullen clouds lay all unbroken
And blackening round the horizon drear
But still they gave no certain token
Of heavy rain or tempests near

I paused confounded and distressed
Down in the heath my limbs I threw
Yet wilder as I longed for rest
More wakeful heart and eyelids grew

It was about the middle night
And under such a starless dome
When gliding from the mountains height
I saw a shadowy figure come

[Catherine]

This is my home where whirlwinds blow
Where snowdrifts round my path are swelling
'Tis many a year 'tis long ago
Since I beheld another dwelling

The shepherd had died on the mountainside
But my ready aid was near him then
I led him back o'er the hidden track
And gave him to his native glen
When tempests roar on the lonely shore
I light my beacon with sea-weeds dry
And it flings its fire through the darkness dire
And gladdens the sailor's hopeless eye

And deem thou not that quite forgot
My mercy will forsake me now
I bring thee care and not despair
Abasement but not overthrow

To a silent home thy foot may come
And years may follow of toilsome pain
But yet I swear by that burning tear
The loved shall meet on its hearth again

[Voice over - Lockwood] 
”The gate swung open. 
 The ramblers were returning. 
 They are afraid of nothing".

47 [Lockwood]

Often rebuked, yet always back returning
To those first feelings that were born with me
And leaving busy chase of wealth and learning
For idle dreams of things which cannot be

Today I will seek not the shadowy region
Its unsustaining vastness waxes drear
And visions rising, legion after legion
Bring the unreal world too strangely near

I'll walk, but not in old heroic traces
And not in paths of "high morality"
And not among the half distinguished faces
The clouded forms of long past history

I'll walk where my own nature would be leading
It vexes me to choose another guide
Where the grey flocks in ferny glens are feeding
Where the wild wind blows on the mountain side

What have those lonely mountains worth revealing?
More glory and more grief then I can tell
The earth that wakes one human heart to feeling
Can center both the worlds of heaven and hell

48 

[Hareton] 

No coward soul is mine
No trembler in the world's storm-troubled sphere
I see Heaven's glories shine
And Faith shines equal, arming me from fear

[Cathy]

O God within my breast
Almighty, ever-present deity
Life that in me has rest
As I, Undying life, have power in thee

[Hareton]

Vain are the thousand creeds
That move men's hearts, unutterably vain,
Worthless as withered weeds
Or idlest froth amid the boundless main

[Cathy]

To waken doubt in one
Holding so fast by thine infinity
So surely anchored on
The steadfast rock of Immortality

[Hareton]

With wide-embracing love
Thy spirit animates eternal years
Pervades and broods above,
Changes, sustains, dissolves, creates and rears

[Cathy]

Though Earth and moon were gone
And suns and universes ceased to be
And thou wert left alone
Every existence would exist in thee

[Hareton]

There is not room for death
Nor atom that its might could render void
Since thou art being and breath
And what thou art may never be destroyed

49 [Nelly]

The sun has set and the long grass now
Waves dreaming in the evening wind

FINALE

<>see "Older Posts" under and far right of the "posted by tefisk at 12: 00 pm" and  "Labels: Wuthering Heights" tool bar for a list of edits [and some vanity press]