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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library- Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
186

announced, as a piece of appalling intelligence, that I had actually
succeeded in making her hate me! A positive labour of Hercules, I
assure you! If it be achieved, I have cause to return thanks. Can I
trust your assertion, Isabella? Are you sure you hate me? If I let
you alone for half a day, won’t you come sighing and wheedling to
me again? I daresay she would rather I had seemed all tenderness
before you: it wounds her vanity to have the truth exposed. But I
don’t care who knows that the passion was wholly on one side; and
I never told her a lie about it. She cannot accuse me of showing
one bit of deceitful softness. The first thing she saw me do, on
coming out of the Grange, was to hang up her little dog; and when
she pleaded for it, the first words I uttered were a wish that I had
the hanging of every being belonging to her, except one: possibly
she took that exception for herself. But no brutality disgusted
her--I suppose she has an innate admiration of it, if only her
precious person were secure from injury! Now, was it not the
depth of absurdity--of genuine idiocy, for that pitiful, slavish,
mean-minded brach to dream that I could love her? Tell your
master, Nelly, that I never, in all my life, met with such an abject
thing as she is. She even disgraces the name of Linton; and I’ve
sometimes relented, from pure lack of invention, in my
experiments on what she could endure, and still creep shamefully
cringing back! But tell him, also, to set his fraternal and
magisterial heart at ease, -that I keep strictly within the limits of
the law. I have avoided, up to this period, giving her the slightest
right to claim a separation; and, what’s more, she’d thank nobody
for dividing us. If she desired to go, she might: the nuisance of her
presence outweighs the gratification to be derived from
tormenting her!”


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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library- Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte



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