The Brussels Brontë Group commemorated
Emily Brontë's bicentenary on Saturday, Oct. 13, 2018, with a talk on
Wuthering Heights by John Bowen,
professor of 19th-century literature at the University of York, followed by a
celebration of Emily's poetry.
Professor John Bowen |
The title of his
talk was bleak -- `Dividing the Desolation’, taken from the first paragraph of
the novel. But Prof. Bowen showed how that first paragraph highlights the
richness of Emily Brontë’s language right from the start. While focusing on the
depth of ideas in Lockwood’s declaration that
``Mr. Heathcliff
and I are such a suitable pair to divide the desolation between us,'' Professor
Bowen also touched on the multiple layers of meaning in phrases like ``solitary
neighbor’’ and ``be troubled with.’’
Then we were off
on an exploration of the characters in the novel and what they mean to
different readers and critics. Along the way, Prof. Bowen touched on the
importance of naming in Emily’s novel, Charlotte Brontë’s feelings about Heathcliff, and
Heathcliff’s feelings about himself. And throwing in an entertaining rendition
of Joseph’s colorful chidings in Yorkshire dialect.
Bowen, who is
president of the Dickens Fellowship, also mentioned Charles Dickens’ apparent
antipathy to the Brontës. There is only one recorded instance of Dickens
talking about the sisters from Haworth, and that is someone’s note about a
conversation with the novelist in which Dickens said he never read the Brontës but ``disapproved
of the whole school.’’ But reading Bleak
House, it's hard to think that Dickens hadn't read Jane Eyre, Prof. Bowen said.
On Wuthering Heights, the question he
wanted to ponder was: Who is the main character? And relatedly: what is central
to the novel? These may sound like straight-forward questions, and most of us
no doubt had our own straight-forward answers. But Prof. Bowen demonstrated the
complexity of the queries and how they go a long way to helping understand how
readers react to Emily’s book.
Critics and readers
have disagreed virtually since the novel was first published in 1847, he said. Is
it about Heathcliff? Is it about Heathcliff and Cathy? Is it about the two Catherines?
Is it a multi-generational family saga? [At least one member of the audience
was disappointed that the moors weren’t part of the discussion.]
Even the narrators
of the novel can’t agree on what it’s about – Mr. Lockwood thinks initially
that it might be a story about him and Heathcliff; Nelly Dean knows it’s all
about Heathcliff. Then Lockwood hesitates between different understandings of
the story that he's hearing from Nelly. Bowen likened Lockwood to an
over-enthusiastic novel-reader as he jumped to speculate about an affinity with
Heathcliff – when of course the two characters are so different.
While Lockwood is
dividing the desolation with Heathcliff, we as readers of the novel have to decide
how to divide our attention among the characters, Prof. Bowen said. Which ones
do we give more weight to than others? Emily Brontë has a particular way of guiding – but also
dividing – the reader’s attention among the different characters. Many
important disagreements about the book seem to stem from critics' and readers'
different senses of who they care about, he said.
Right from the
start, a discussion about characters was central to deciding what the novel is about.
Prof. Bowen cited one of the very first reviews of Wuthering Heights, in Spectator magazine in December 1847, which begins
with a discussion not of plot, not of theme, but of its characters.
Which characters
the reader chooses to focus on colors how one interprets the novel. And the
disagreements don’t go away as the novel becomes more familiar and gets more
discussed over the years. Prof. Bowen cited literary critic Q.D. Leavis, in her
influential reading of Emily’s novel (which also was discussed by Professor
John Sutherland when he spoke to our group in April).
Leavis declared
the first Catherine’s story ``the real moral center of the book’’ and called Heathcliff
an ``unsatisfactory composite,'' saying Heathcliff was ``an enigmatic figure
only by reason of his creator's indecisions''. Saying he ultimately doesn’t
agree with Leavis’s reading of Wuthering
Heights, Prof. Bowen said there's no easy way to reconcile the different
interpretations of the novel. The conundrum points to an important aspect of how
the book captures our attention. The motor of the plot and our attentiveness to
it are constantly in motion, Prof. Bowen said.
One reason not to
consider Heathcliff as the center of the novel, Bowen said, is the title that
Emily gave it. The names of the other Brontë novels -- Jane Eyre, The Tenant of
Wildfell Hall, Shirley, Agnes Grey, The Professor -- all point readers to a single central character.
Only Wuthering Heights and later Villette encourage us to distribute our
attention differently, to a group of characters.
From the naming of
the novel, Bowen segued to the naming of Emily’s characters in it. Most novels
have a much more straight-forward relationship with naming than Wuthering Heights does, indicating that
Emily was aware of how unstable naming and identification can be. This comes
through in the multiple and echoing names the two Catherines go through, and
also the singularity of Heathcliff’s one name.
As readers try to
decide which characters they might want to focus on, the old servant Joseph has
some pointed advice: most of them are ``nowt’’ (nothing or nobody in the
Yorkshire dialect). Bowen read off some of Joseph’s colorful criticisms:
`marred, wearisome
nowt!'
`gooid fur nowt,
slatternly witch!'
`a raight nowt;
and shoo's another’
`nasty ill nowt'
On Heathcliff, Charlotte
seems to have trouble coming to terms with her sister’s character. Whereas
Charlotte famously called him ``a Ghoul — an Afreet’’ in her preface to the
1850 edition of Wuthering Heights and
questioned ``whether it is right or advisable to create beings like Heathcliff,’’
she was more generous toward Heathcliff in an 1848 letter to her publisher: ``…
some of his spirit seems breathed through the whole narrative.’’
Prof. Bowen said
part of the distinctiveness, creativity, and strangeness of Wuthering Heights comes from the fact
that, though Heathcliff is arguably the main character, the book gives the
reader almost no access to his consciousness. It's very customary in the
English novel for the central character to have a very close, self-revealing
relationship with the reader, Bowen said, citing Jane Eyre and Villette‘s Lucy Snowe as prime examples.
But we almost
never get inside Heathcliff’s head. In one way, he has centrality; in another
way, you get almost no access to Heathcliff’s internal thoughts. It’s through
other people in the book that we gain insight about Heathcliff’s character,
whereas in Jane Eyre, the reader is
deeply aware of Jane's thoughts and feelings.
But there is one
place late in Wuthering Heights where
we come close to hearing Heathcliff’s inner thoughts. In a scene in chapter 33
where love seems to conquer revenge, Nelly reports Heathcliff telling her: ``I don't care for striking: I can't take the trouble to
raise my hand! That sounds as if I had been labouring the whole time only to
exhibit a fine trait of magnanimity. It is far from being the case: I have lost
the faculty of enjoying their destruction, and I am too idle to destroy for
nothing.’’
A recognition or a
revelation for Heathcliff, the scene is ``the moment when Heathcliff is most
articulate about himself,’’ Bowen said.
In the afternoon,
group members read aloud some of Emily’s most famous poems, including `No
Coward Soul Is Mine’, `Remembrance’ and `The Prisoner.’
J.H.
Readers of Emily's poems - they were all brilliant! |
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