Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Why was Hindley send to college in Wuthering Heights?

It is in Chapter Five of this novel that we can find the
answer to this question. As the health of Mr. Earnshaw begins to fail and the animosity
between Hindley and Heathcliff becomes ever more evident, the curate of the parish is
able to step in and make a suggestion to Mr. Earnshaw regarding the future of his son
and heir that would help achieve harmony in the house through his
absence:



At
last, our curate... advised that the young man should be sent to college; and Mr.
Earnshaw agreed, though with a heavy spirit, for he said--"Hindley was nought, and would
never thrive as where he
wandered."



Note the way in
which Mr. Earnshaw seems to have quite an accurate, if not slightly depressing,
impression of his son, recognising the limitations of his character and also
foreshadowing Hindley's later decline into drink and dissipation. Thus it is the curate
who recommends that Hindley goes to college, and it is Mr. Earnshaw who sends him there
even though he has his doubts of the benefit of such an education for
Hindley.

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