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381 be!” “No,” she persisted, “I won’t--I can’t tell what to do to make you talk to me; and you are determined not to understand. When I call you stupid, I don’t mean anything--I don’t mean that I despise you. Come, you shall take notice of me, Hareton: you are my cousin, and you shall own me.” “I shall have naught to do wi’ you and your mucky pride, and your damned mocking tricks!” he answered. “I’ll go to hell, body and soul, before I look sideways after you again. Side out o’ t’ gait, now, this minute!” Catherine frowned, and retreated to the window-seat, chewing her lip, and endeavouring, by humming an eccentric tune, to conceal a growing tendency to sob. “You should be friends with your cousin, Mr. Hareton,” I interrupted, “since she repents of her sauciness. It would do you a great deal of good; it would make you another man, to have her for a companion.” “A companion!” he cried; “when she hates me, and does not think me fit to wipe her shoon! Nay, if it made me a king, I’d not be scorned for seeking her good will any more.” “It is not I who hate you, it is you who hate me!” wept Cathy, no longer disguising her trouble. “You hate me as much as Mr. Heathcliff does, and more.” “You’re a damned liar,” began Earnshaw: “why have I made him angry, by taking your part, then, a hundred times? and that, when you sneered at and despised me, and--Go on plaguing me, and I’ll step in yonder, and say you worried me out of the kitchen!” “I didn’t know you took my part,” she answered, drying her |