Wuthering Heights
Wuthering Heights
In Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte uses the presence of light to create a distinction between the emotions displayed that are intended by nature and the sentiments that are displayed as a pretense to cover true emotions. Light that occurs in the environment, sunlight and firelight, shine when the emotions that are being shown are what nature planned. True emotions cannot be changed or guided just as the light from Nature is outside human control. Whereas when artificial light, generated by gas, is present the sentiments shown are those contrary to the urges of nature and more in accordance with the dictates of society at the time. Many of the main events that occur within the two houses reflect the difference between simulated emotions and artificial light, and true light and heart-felt sentiments. Within Thrushcross Grange, a symbol of success in the society of the day, the magnificent gas candelabra bathes the house in man-made light. In Wuthering Heights, a less lavish home, the house is entirely lit by natural fire. It is in Wuthering Heights that Catherine is able to profess her love for Heathcliff. This is juxtaposed to when Catherine is staying at Thrushcross Grange and displays an imitation of love for Edgar which is not sincere. Catherine is not the only character whose real emotions are revealed in the presence of natural light. Nelly also reveals an emotion that she truly feels but cannot openly display.
Emotions that come from the heart are revealed when the lighting is natural to emphasize the connection with Nature and goodness. Light from the sun and fire are derived from the powers of Nature just as Nature controls emotions felt by humans. Catherine and Nelly know that they should not love Heathcliff and Hindley, respectively, but the powers of nature are greater than human command. By presenting the true emotions in natural light, the reader is drawn into the warmth and beauty of true love. The wildness and dangerous side of fire also remind us that emotions are powerful and humans can lose control over them. Catherine is seated by the fireside when she utters the most heartfelt words of the novel, “my love for Heathcliff resembles the eternal rocks beneath- a source of little visible delight, but necessary. Nelly I am Heathcliff- he’s always, always in my mind- not as a pleasure, any more than I am always a pleasure to myself” (9.82). The firelight is pure just as the words of Catherine are constant and heartfelt. Later, when Catherine betrays her emotions, it is in the presence of artificial light at Thrushcross Grange that she shows false emotions. Catherine is not the only character to make a revelation in natural light and then spend the rest of the novel displaying another emotion. Nelly, while walking under the sun says, “[t]he sun shone yellow on its gray head, reminding me of summer; and I cannot say why, but all at once, a gush of child’s sensations flowed into my heart. Hindley and I held it a favorite spot twenty years before” (11.107). Only once does Nelly disclose that she saw Hindley as more than a friend, and it is during a walk under the most wholesome form of light, the sun. Catherine and Nelly exhibit the emotions planned by Nature when the natural light of the world is present.
Emotions displayed by artificial light are often false emotions but ones which mimic the expectations of a controlling society and by the politics of marriage at the time. The presence of simulated light in the form of gas displays humans altering nature for