Tuesday, December 29, 2015

poetry answers

Poetry
Leisure:
What is this life, if full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare?

No time to stand beneath the boughs?
And stare as long as sheep or cows.

No time to see when wood we pass,
Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.

No time to turn at Beauty's glance.
And watch her feet, how they dance.

No time to wait till her mouth can
Enrich that smile her eyes began.

A poor life this, if full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.
Answer the following questions:
1.     What is the theme of the poem?
 The beauty of nature which we fail to enjoy because of our busy life.
2.    The poet has his regrets. What is he regretting?  Why?
He is regretting the dull life we are leading as we do not have enough time to look all the wonders God has created around us and fully enjoy and appreciate them.
3.    Find two figures of speech and explain them.
a.  Simile: streams full of stars like skies at night." The poet compares the streams to the skies that full of stars.
b.  Personification: "No time to turn at Beauty's glance And watch her feet, how they dance." He personifies nature. He gives it some human characteristics like in " Her mouth can enrich that smile her eyes began."
c.   Alliteration in the second and the last lines "stand" and Stare". It creates music.
4 What is the rhyme scheme of the poem?
The poem is composed of fourteen lines. Each two lines rhyme. The first two lines and the last two lines have the same rhyme.
aa-bb-cc-dd-ee-ff-aa
5. Why does the poet want us to have some free time?
To be able to have time to go out to the nature and contemplate God's creation and appreciate it.
6. Do you have time to go out to enjoy nature? What do you do?
-Opinion.
7. Why does the poet spell the word "Beauty" with a capital "B" in the seventh line?
Because he personifies nature and gives it a name"Beauty".
8. What according to the poet is a poor life?
A life of a busy person who does not have enough time to enjoy nature
9. Why did the poet resort to repetition in "no Time"?
Each two line begin with "no time" to emphasize the poet's idea about failing to find time and missing all the beautiful things that God created.
10. What does "her" in line 11 refer to?
It refers to nature which the poet personifies giving it human characteristics.

Blow, Blow:
Blow, Blow, thou winter wind,
Thou art not so unkind
As man's ingratitude;
Thy tooth is not so keen,
Because thou art not seen,
Although thy breath be rude.
Heigh-ho! Sing heigh-ho! Unto the green holly
Most friendship is feigning, most loving mere folly
Then heigh-ho! The holly!
This life is most jolly.
Freeze, freeze, thou bitter sky,
That dost not bite so nigh
As benefits forgot:
Though thou the waters warp,
Thy sting is not so sharp
Heigh-ho! Sing heigh-ho! Unto the green holly
Most friendship is feigning, most loving mere folly
Then heigh-ho! The holly!
This life is most jolly.
Answer the following questions:
1.     What is the theme of the poem? Find a quote from the poem that illustrates the main idea.
The ungratefulness of mankind which is much harder than a harsh winter weather as a very harsh wind could not hurt as much as the rudeness of mankind. He encourages man to keep away from a lot of his fellow men and to enjoy the happy life in the forest without hatred or dishonesty.
Thou art not so unkind
As man's ingratitude;
Thy tooth is not so keen
2. Find three figures of speech and explain them.
a. A simile: " Thou art not so unkind As man's ingratitude."  The poet compares Man's ungratefulness and ingratitude to the harsh winter wind although the former bites much harder and without any kind of mercy.
b. Personification: "Thy tooth is not so keen becacause thou art not seen." The poet speaks to the wind asking it to blow and then to freeze.
c. Alliteration: "heigh-ho! Sing heigh! Ho unto the green holly."
4.    What is the effect of using the word "not" in the poem?
The use of the word "not" shows the effect of a false friend. "Freeze Freeze thou bitter sky, That dost not so nigh." Although very cold water is shocking, it is still less painful than a false friend who would have a greater effect on man's spirit than harsh weather.
5.    What do you consider harsher that the winter wind? Why?
opinion
Bed in Summer:
In winter, I get up at night
And dress by yellow candle light.
In summer, quite the other way
I have to go to bed by day
I have to go to bed and see
The birds still hopping on the tree
Or hear the grown-ups people's feet
Still going past me in the street
And does it not seem hard to you
When all the sky is clear and blue
And I should like so much to play
To have to go to bed by day.

Answer the following questions:
1. How old do you think the poet is? Why?
It is clear that the poet is only a child who is really unhappy for going to bed early missing all the fun he would have if he stays up till late."I should like so much to play." Also, he is talking about grown up people who have the privilege of staying up till late while he is lying in his bed.
2.  paraphrase the poem.
The poet does not like the idea of having to get up early during winter when it is still dark. On the other hand, he has to go to bed early in summer when the sky is clear and blue and he still wants to playas he can still hear the activities of all the other creatures like the birds which are still active. Also the grown-up people have this privilege of enjoying their time while he has to go to bed
4. Find a contrast. Why does the poet resort to contrasts.
A contrast between summer and winter. Also between himself as a child who cannot stay till a late hour and grown-up people who still enjoy their day. The contrast sheds light on the unfair life the poet is leading that deprives him of the enjoyment he is yearning for.
Night
The sun descending in the west,
The evening star does shine,
The birds are silent in their nest,
And I must seek for mine.

The moon like a flower,
In heaven's high bower,
With silent delight
Sits and smiles on the night.
Answer the following question:
1. Paraphrase the first stanza.
The poet is talking about night. The sun is setting, the evening star is shining, everything is quiet; even the birds are silent in their nest and it is time for the poet to go to his own nest (home).
2. Find two figures of speech and explain them.
a. Metaphor: "I must seek for mine." He compares his home to a nest.
b. Personification: The moon is personified as it "sits", "smiles".
c. Simile: "The moon like a flower" The moon resembles a flower.
3. What is the rhyme scheme of the two stanzas?
Ab-ab-cc-dd
4. How does the poet feel at night? Why?
It is clear that the poet is infatuated by the softness and quietness of the night. As the beauty of the night is accentuated by the use of the simile "the moon like a flower".
5. What does the night represent to you?
Opinion
6. What does "mine" refer to?
The poet's nest which he means his home as the birds are looking for their nests he is going to go home seeking for rest.
















novel answers

Wuthering Heights / Answers of Final Revision
Comment on the following quotations:
    1- Heathcliff said to Nelly on the Christmas day at Wuthering Heights.
    Hindley made fun of Heathcliff in front of Edgar.
    Heathcliff threw the apple pie plate towards Edgar’s face.
    Hindley locked Heathcliff in the room and didn’t attend the party.
    Heathcliff decided to seek revenge on Hindley. (Theme of revenge)
    Heathcliff wanted to appear pleasant to please Catherine.

    2- Hindley said these words to Heathcliff in WH.
    Catherine stayed at the Grange for five weeks.
    Catherine changed after she stayed there and returned back as a real lady. Hindley told
Heathcliff to come and welcome her as the rest of the servants.
    It shows how Hindley degraded Heathcliff and treated him as a servant. (revenge)

    3- Hindley to Heathcliff in WH on Christmas day.
    Catherine stayed at the Grange and changed a lot.
    Edgar was invited to attend the Christmas party.
    Heathcliff cleaned himself and wanted to be better than Edgar.
    Hindley didn’t like that and insulted him in front of Edgar. He remembered Mr. Linton’s words about Heathcliff.

    4- Old Catherine to Heathcliff in WH.
    The confrontation between Catherine and Heathcliff,
    Catherine stayed at the Grange for five weeks and returned back with a great change in her character and her appearance.
    Catherine liked the Grange’s life and liked Edgar too.
    Catherine compared Edgar’s talk to Heathcliff’s.
    Catherine found that Heathcliff’s company is nothing as he says nothing in comparison to Edgar.

    5- Catherine the ghost to Mr. Lockwood in WH.
    Mr. lockwood went to rent The Grange and the weather was so harsh.
    He couldn’t return back because of the harshness of the weather.
    The dogs attacked him for seizing the lamp from Joseph and his nose bled.
    Zillah took him to stay at Catherine’s room.
    He saw Joseph’s nightmare then woke up at a knocking on the window and he thought it was a branch but he found it was Catherine’s ghost which asked him to enter the house as she has been wandering for about twenty years.
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6- Mr. Earnshaw said this to Mrs Earnshaw in Wuthering Heights after returning from Liverpool.
    Mr. Earnshaw brought with him a dark skinned gypsy.
    Everyone in the family was shocked and didn’t accept the child.
    The children were angry as they didn’t receive their gifts.
    Mr. Earnshaw considered the boy as a gift though the others considered him as a devil
because of his dark skin.
    This quotation also is a foreshadowing for Heathcliff’s character who turned to be a real
devil seeking all the time for revenge and ruined the lives of all those around him.

    7- Old Catherine said this to Nelly in Wuthering Heights after Edgar proposed to her.
    Catherine was confused between marrying Edgar or Heathcliff.
    Heathcliff would degrade her but marrying Edgar would make her a great woman.
    She would help Heathcliff with Edgar’s money.
    She compared her love to Heathcliff to the unchangeable rocks and her love to Edgar to the changeable leaves.
    She wanted to know Nelly’s opinion who blamed Catherine.

    8- Edgar said this to Old Catherine in the Grange after their marriage when Heathcliff
returned after 3 years of absence in the Grange.
    Heathcliff overheard Catherine’s confession to Nelly so, he ran away for 3 years.
    Losing hope of his return after being seriously sick, Catherine married Edgar.
    When he returned, Catherine was overjoyed which Edgar could easily observe.
    Edgar considered him a runaway servant so the kitchen would be the most suitable place
to receive him.
    Catherine convinced Edgar telling him that she couldn’t stay in the kitchen.
    Edgar was shocked when seeing Heathcliff changed and said to him,” Sit down, sir.”

    9- Isabella said this to old Catherine in the Grange after confessing her love to Heathcliff.
     After Heathcliff’s return, Isabella was deceived by his appearance and fell for him.
    She was angry with Catherine as she wanted everyone to love her and didn’t give Heathcliff
a chance to see anybody else.
    Catherine did everything she could to make Isabella realize that Heathcliff would never
love her.
    Catherine told Isabella that, as she spent her childhood with Heathcliff, she was his friend
and knew him well.
    Catherine told her that Heathcliff would never love a Linton and would marry her for her
money and talked badly about his character supported by Nelly.
    Isabella accused Catherine of being worse than 20 enemies to talk like that about a friend.
    Heathcliff was able to trick Isabella, she ran away with him and married him and later on
she discovered his real character.
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    10- Heathcliff said this to old Catherine in the Grange after his trial to hold  Isabella.
    After Heathcliff knew that Isabella loved him, he planned to act as if he loved her to
win her. One day he found her alone in the garden and tried to hold her.
    Nelly saw him from the window and told old Catherine who furiously blamed Heathcliff and
ordered him to stay away from Isabella as Catherine was jealous.
    Heathcliff told Catherine to stay away from them as they were free to do what they wanted and if Isabella didn’t object, Catherine shouldn’t interfere.
    A quarrel between Heathcliff and Edgar followed this conversation which led to Edgar disowning his sister as Heathcliff was able to trick her into marrying him.
   

    11- Edgar said this to Heathcliff at Wuthering Heights when Nelly told him about
Heathcliff's  plan to deceive Isabella. Edgar felt that Heathcliff could ruin every pure person.
    Edgar quarrelled with Heathcliff.
    Edgar asked Heathcliff  to go out and never to return back.
    Catherine locked herself in her room and prevented herself from eating.
    Edgar locked himself in his library.
    Catherine became ill.
    Catherine decided to break their heart by breaking her own.

                 
    12- Catherine to Edgar at the kitchen in the Grange .
    Edgar asked Nelly to bring strong men . ( servants)
    Catherine locked the door and threw the key in the hottest part in the fire.
    Catherine asked Edgar either to fight him back or apologize to him.
    Edgar quarrelled with Heathcliff.
    Catherine asked Heathcliff  to leave after seeing the servants coming from the back door
of the kitchen.
    This quarrel led to Catherine's illness.


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    13-  Catherine said this to Edgar at the Grange during her illness.
Catherine's illness turned to be madness as she started to torn the bed sheets by her teeth.
Catherine blamed Edgar for leaving her in her illness and didn't ask about her.
 Edgar informed Catherine that Nelly didn't tell him about her illness.
Nelly didn't tell Edgar as she thought she was pretending.
Edgar shouted at Nelly and blamed her for not telling him.

    14- Edgar said this to Nelly at the Grange about Isabella after knowing about her
escaping with Heathcliff as was seen by some servants in Gimmerton with Heathcliff.
    Heathcliff ran away with Isabella to take his revenge on Edgar and to take her money.
    Isabella sent a note To Edgar to announce her marriage from Heathcliff and ask for
forgiveness. Edgar warned Isabella before running away.

    15-Heathcliff said this to Nelly at Wuthering Heights when she went to visit Isabella after
receiving her letter.
    Nelly found Isabella in a very bad condition.
    She appeared completely different one in her appearance.
    Nelly asked Heathcliff  to have pity on Isabella.
    Heathcliff explained to Nelly that Isabella doesn't deserve any mercy as she saw him
hanging her dog and she didn't hate him.
    Heathcliff told Nelly to tell Edgar that Isabella brought shame to the Lintons .
   
    16- These words were said by Heathcliff to Nelly when Edgar asked for Hareton to come
and live with him in the grange after Hindley’s death.
Heathcliff refused to give Hareton to Edgar claiming that he wishes to raise him up on his own.
Heathcliff asked for his son in return so Edgar never mentioned it again not to harm Linton.

Heathcliff had a plan in mind to take his revenge from Edgar.

Heathcliff enjoyed seeing Hareton a copycat of himself.
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    17- These words were said by young Cathy to Zillah when she learned that Hareton is her cousin.
    Cathy was shocked when she knew that Hareton is her cousin as she thought him a servant in the house.
    Hareton was uneducated, and Heathcliff had degraded him so much to the extent that     Cathy refused the idea that he is her cousin.
    Cathy mentioned in her words that her father went to fetch her cousin (Linton) from London.
    Hareton got embarrassed and tried to offer her a present which she refused.

    18- These words were said by Heathcliff to Nelly when she took Linton his son to him.
    Heathcliff referred to Linton, his own son, as his property.
    Heathcliff wished that his son would help him fulfill his plans of revenge.
    Heathcliff made fun of him with Joseph and Hareton the moment he saw him.
    Heathcliff prepared a room especially for him and prepared for his education as he wanted him to be the most important gentleman in the area.
    He was planning that his son would help him achieving his targets.


19- Heathcliff said these words to Nelly about Hareton when she went to the Heights with Cathy.
    Heathcliff was enjoying Hareton’s sufferings having felt them himself.
    Hareton turned to be a copycat of Heathcliff.
    Heathcliff ordered Hareton to walk with Linton and Cathy and he ordered him not to fix his eyes on the lady and to keep silent.
    Hareton obeyed his orders like a loyal dog.
    Hareton considered Heathcliff as a father to him.

20- These words were said by young Cathy to Linton when she went to visit him in Wuthering
Heights.
    Linton admired Cathy and he told her that she is kind.
    Cathy told Linton that she wished he were her brother but he told her he wished she was his wife as his father said.
    Cathy replied by telling him the above words giving evidence of Heathcliff and Isabella.
    Linton told her that her mother ( old Catherine) didn’t love her father (Edgar) but she loved his father (Heathcliff).
    Cathy couldn’t believe him but he kept on saying (she did) until Cathy pushed his chair and he got breathless and coughed.
    He blamed Cathy but then the quarrel ended up and Cathy helped him.


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    21- Hareton said this to Linton, at W.H in one of Cathy's visits to Linton during Nelly's and
Edgar's sickness.
    Hareton was embarrassed as when he read for her the letters she asked him for the
figures so he was angry and told them to leave the kitchen and to read anywhere else
because that was his place. After that Linton blamed Cathy for what happened.
    Hareton was jealous of Linton as young Cathy cared for him.

    22- Linton said this to Cathy, in one of their meetings near W.H.
    As he couldn’t walk to a place they agreed on. The meeting was extremely boring as Linton
was very tired and not interested in Cathy, so it was very clear that he was on a duty and
he was expecting his father anytime.
    He was afraid of his father as he used to treat him badly.
    Cathy was able to realize that Linton was forced to go to their meeting.

    23- Cathy said this to Linton, on one of their meeting near W.H.
    As she was very angry because her father was very sick, and she has to leave him and go
to meet Linton, so she told him that she knew that he is pretending to love her and it was a
plan from Heathcliff.

    24- Heathcliff said this to Nelly, in W.H.
    Revealing part of his revenge plan to take the Grange, so he set a trap when both Edgar and
Linton were getting worse.
    Heathcliff feared that Linton’s death before Edgar would spoil his plan of taking the
Grange.
    This led to Heathcliff setting a trap to make Linton and Cathy marry quickly.



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    25- Heathcliff said this to Cathy, in W.H.
    When he trapped Cathy and Nelly, and Cathy begged him to leave to go for her father as he
was very sick and she will come back anyway to marry Linton. But he refused and told her the
above words.
    Heathcliff was pleased to feel that Edgar would think that Cathy grew tired of nursing
her father, that’s why she ran away.

    26- Heathcliff said it to Nelly, at the Grange, after Edgar's death.   
    Cathy hurried to her father to see him for the last time.         
    Cathy kissed her father on his death bed.
    After the funeral, Heathcliff showed up to take Cathy back to the Heights.
    Nelly begged Heathcliff to leave Cathy in the Grange and send Linton to her but Heathcliff
refused, telling her these words.
    Heathcliff is planning revenge from Cathy, he wishes to degrade them to the state of
servants as a sort of revenge from their parents.
    They will be serving on their own lands without wages.
    He made Cathy walk all the way to the Heights.

    27- Young Cathy said this to Heathcliff, at the grange, after Edgar's death.
    After Edgar's death, and after his funeral, Heathcliff showed up to take Cathy back to the
Heights.
    Heathcliff asked her to stay beside Linton as his wife.
    Cathy expressed her love to Linton, and she would be glad to be beside him and to take care
of him as a loyal wife, while Heathcliff  himself no body loved him or cared about him.
   


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    28- Heathcliff said this to Cathy, at Wuthering Heights.
    When Linton was dying and Cathy begged him to bring a doctor to see Linton, but he
refused and told her to nurse him by herself if she cared for him.
    Heathcliff prevented Hareton from helping her.
    Cathy stayed beside him till he died after few hours as she was a faithful wife.
    Heathcliff appeared as a heartless father who cared about nothing except achieving g his
plans as he was using Linton just as a tool to be the master of the Grange.
    As Heathcliff had already made Linton sign papers of giving his father the Grange during
Cathy’s absence after Edgar’s death, Linton became nothing to him.


    29- Cathy said this to Hareton and Zillah, at Wutherting Heights.
    When Hareton asked Zillah to tell Cathy to read for them, Cathy refused as she was angry
with all of them for not helping her in nursing Linton and she reminded them with the time she
needed help and no one gave her a hand because of Heathcliff's orders.
    She told them that she is only down from her room because of the cold weather not to
amuse them.
   

    30- Nelly said this to Hareton, at Wuthering Heights.
    She was advising him to rebuild his relation with his cousin and forget about the past after
Cathy's many attempts to apologize to him to forgive her for her bad behavior and the way
she embarrassed him before.
    He was angry with her and felt that she hated him because whenever he tried to show
her that he improved himself, she either made fun of him or embarrassed him.

   

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    31. Heathcliff said that to Cathy and Hareton when he heard laughter. It was said while
they were having their meal. Although Nelly warned Cathy not to talk to or notice her cousin
too much as Heathcliff would be angry with both of them, yet she started to move closer to
Hareton and pushed flowers into the food on his plate until he laughed softly.
    It shows how wicked Heathcliff was as he considered laughing a kind of disease which he
cured them of by making them miserable.
   

    32. Cathy said that to Heathcliff when Josef discovered the attack on his precious bushes
which Cathy persuaded Hareton to clear in order to bring some plants over from the Grange.
Heathcliff asked Cathy who had given her permission to touch them. She reminded him that
he had taken all her land. However, he declined that she had ever had any as according to Mr.
Linton's will the land belonged to Isabella's son after Edgar's death.


    33.  This is said by Heathcliff to Nelly after he found it useless to execute his revenge plan
on his enemies' children when the right time came. It was not that he was showing generosity
but he lost the power to enjoy their destruction. He admitted that a strange change was
taking place inside him. He started to take no notice in his daily life that he hardly
remembered to eat or drink. He could see Old Catherine's face everywhere. He could see her
face shaped on stones, in every cloud, in every tree. For some days after the evening, he
talked to Nelly about the change he felt was taking place, Heathcliff avoided meeting them at
meals. Then a change took place in which he became bright and cheerful, very much excited,
wild and glad. He admitted to Nelly that he became within  sight of his heaven. It was only a
few hours before his death.



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    34.  This is said by Heathcliff to Nelly after he found it useless to execute his revenge plan
on his enemies' children when the right time came. He confessed to Nelly his feelings towards
Hareton. He felt for him in a variety of ways. To him, Hareton is a vivid picture of his own
youth. Heathcliff had gone through what Hareton was going through then. Also, Hareton's
extreme likeness to Catherine connected him with her in Heathcliff's mind. For some days
after the evening, he talked to Nelly about the change he felt was taking place, Heathcliff
avoided meeting them at meals. Then a change took place in which he became bright and
cheerful, very much excited, wild and glad. He admitted to Nelly that he became within sight
of his heaven. It was only afew hours before his death.
                    


   

     























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Answer the following questions:-
1-           a- Heathcliff said this to Nelly.
    b- Heathcliff felt excited and was eager to reach his heaven. Heathcliff's heaven was to
die and be with Catherine forever.
    c- In his last days, Heathcliff underwent a lot of changes. He used to sleep in Catherine's
bedroom. He ate once every 24 hours. He was cheerful and talked to others in a nice way. He
was calm and excited. He used to stare at walls and talk to someone not seen by others.


2- Opinion Question: (Imagine you are Linton and describe your feelings when you heard him
say "property & it" mentioning the story from the time Nelly took him to Wuthering
Heights till the meeting with his father). Talk as if you are Linton saying “I”.

3- a- Hindley said this to Heathcliff on Christmas Day.
    b- Hindley was angry and annoyed when he saw Heathcliff clean and cheerful. He didn't
want any further relation between Catherine and Heathcliff as he considered him no more
than a servant especially after Mr. Linton warned him to take care of his sister.
    c- The result was that Hindley and Edgar kept mocking at Heathcliff's hair. Heathcliff
became angry and threw a hot apple pie on Edgar's face. Hindley punished Heathcliff by
locking him in a room and he was deprived of spending a happy Christmas with Catherine.
Catherine sneaked to him in his prison and then Nelly got them out of the room. At the end
he was thinking deeply how he would take his revenge on Hindley.

 4- a- Heathcliff said this to Nelly on Christmas Day after he had got out of the room
where Hindley locked him up because he threw a hot apple pie on Edgar's face.
    b- Heathcliff took his revenge by:
ü stopping Hareton's education.
ü teaching Hareton to swear and curse.
ü lending money to Hindley who couldn't pay him back so taking Wuthering Heights instead.
ü making Hareton do services in the house as a servant.


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5-Give the theme, give evidence and discuss:
    Revenge:     
               Heathcliff taking revenge. (through the whole novel)
              Hindley taking revenge on Heathcliff. (through the whole novel)
    Class discrimination (distinction):       
              Edgar andHindley making fun of Heathcliff. (Ch. 8)
              Cathy treating Hareton. (Ch. 22)
              Catherine choosing Edgar not Heathcliff because he was rich. (Ch. 10)
              Edgar’s treatment changed towards Heathcliff when he returned rich. (Ch. 11)
                      
    Love: Heathcliff and Catherine's love.(through the whole novel)
                      
                       (or any other themes with justifications that you know)

 6-         Catherine and young Cathy:
    Both had the same eyes and a certain width of forehead.
    Both liked the moors at an early age.
    Both had high spirits but Catherine was rough and wild while young Cathy's heart was kind
and loving.
    Both educated their lovers; Catherine educated Heathcliff and young Cathy educated
Hareton.
    Both had the same name but Edgar used to call his daughter Cathy to make her name
different from her mother’s.
              (or any other points of comparison that you know)


7- Opinion Question:
    (You should advise young Cathy either to continue her relationship with Heathcliff and
Linton or to stay away from them and obey her father giving evidence and explaining why you
gave this piece of advice
               
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    8- In Thrushcross Grange lived the Linton family. The two children lived a happy and
healthy life till they knew the Earnshaws and started visiting Wuthering Heights. As long as
young Cathy was sheltered in the Grange by her father, nothing happened to ruin her life
except after going to the Heights. When Mr. Earnshaw was alive he didn’t treat his children as
he treated Heathcliff which created an atmosphere of jealousy and hatred which
consequently led to Hindley taking revenge when he became master and later on Heathcliff
taking revenge after he returned from the three years of absence. Hareton wasn’t raised in a
healthy atmosphere as long as Heathcliff was alive, only improved after young Cathy went to
live there .Linton, Heathcliff’s son, lived a miserable life in Wuthering Heights concerning his
bad health and his father’s ill treatment. The atmosphere in the Grange was full of love and
sacrifice while in the Heights was full of hatred and revenge.



    9- When Catherine discussed with Nelly how she was confused between Edgar and
Heathcliff, she compared her love to Heathcliff to the rocks which would never change while
her love for Edgar was compared to the leaves of trees which could easily change or fade. She
loved Heathcliff as he shared with her all her childhood but when she wanted to marry, she
said she would choose Edgar as he would give her the most comfortable and richest life while
Heathcliff would degrade her. She married Edgar after 3 years of Heathcliff’s absence as
she might have lost hope of Heathcliff’s return. It seems that Catherine regretted her choice
of husband because as soon as Heathcliff returned, she started to suffer again, was jealous
when she saw the relationship between Heathcliff and Isabella. Also more than once she took
Heathcliff’s side in front of her husband (Quarrel when she locked the door not to let Edgar
get an outside help – Explain).      



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    10- Heathcliff could be a victim and a victimizer; a victim to Mr. Earnshaw who treated him
better than anybody else which led to everybody’s hatred especially Hindley who seized the
first chance and tried to take revenge (Discuss). He could also be a victimizer and his victims
are Hareton, Young Cathy and Linton (Discuss how he treated everyone of them).
             
    11- The event could be:   
    a. Heathcliff listening to half the conversation  between Catherine and Nelly              or
    b. Heathcliff returned after 3 years of absence                                                    or
    c. Catherine married Edgar
(Any answer should be supported with evidence and why you chose it. Second part of question
is an opinion question).

    12- What Mr. Earnshaw said is a foreshadowing to Heathcliff’s character as being a devil.
Throughout the story Heathcliff’s character revealed to be really a devil.
    a. He made use of Hindley who needed money to take Wuthering Heights.
    b. He took revenge on more than one character.
    c. He even treated his son in the rudest way.
    d. He misused Isabella’s love to him.
    e. He used his son to take Thrushcross Grange.
(Any point, and you can have a lot more points, needs to be elaborated and discussed.)


    13- Edgar Linton was a rich, sympathetic, aristocratic, peaceful character. He was used to
luxurious life in the Grange. He was a loyal and loving husband (Explain).
He was a loving and overprotecting father (Explain).
ü  He did anything that could please his wife. (Give evidence)
ü  He was a faithful husband. (Give evidence)
ü  He was a good brother. (Give evidence)

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    14- Young Cathy was trapped by Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights. She met Linton who
acted as if he was afraid of his father to drag her with Nelly to Wuthering Heights. There
they were locked by Heathcliff till young Cathy married Linton. (Explain thoroughly Chs. 29,
30) Heathcliff did that to make sure that Linton married Cathy before he would die. He
wanted also to make sure that the property would be his (Heathcliff’s) even if Linton died
before his uncle. Cathy married Linton and she was able to convince Linton to set her free to
go and see her father who died shortly after her arrival. After Edgar’s funeral Heathcliff
went to take Cathy to live with them in Wuthering Heights. After Linton’s death, Heathcliff
showed Cathy Linton’s will in which he made Linton write everything for his father. This
happened during Cathy’s absence for her father’s funeral. (Explain thoroughly)

                                                   

    15- Hareton's education was stopped by Heathcliff as Hindley stopped Heathcliff's
education. He was taught by Heathcliff to swear and curse and to be proud of his condition as
was Heathcliff. When young Cathy went to live in the Heights, she taught Hareton to read and
write as Heathcliff was taught by Catherine to read and write. Whenever Heathcliff looked
at him, he remembered himself. When Linton and young Cathy made fun of Hareton, he
remembered when Hindley and Edgar made fun of him in Christmas so Heathcliff looked at
them a hateful look. Hareton tried to clean himself when Cathy was in her second visit to the
Heights as Heathcliff tried to clean himself on Christmas.  



Best Wishes and Good Luck




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