Original Ending: Catherine dies, and Heathcliff, consumed by his obsessive love and desire for revenge, leads a life of torment until his own death. Alternative Ending: An alternative ending could involve a moment of reconciliation between Heathcliff and Catherine before her death. Instead of HeathcRead more
Original Ending: Catherine dies, and Heathcliff, consumed by his obsessive love and desire for revenge, leads a life of torment until his own death.
Alternative Ending: An alternative ending could involve a moment of reconciliation between Heathcliff and Catherine before her death. Instead of Heathcliff continuing his path of vengeance, he might find some peace or redemption by understanding the destructive nature of his actions and seeking forgiveness. This would allow Heathcliff a chance to break free from his torment and offer a more complex resolution to his character arc.
Reason for Change:This revised ending would still retain the novel’s gothic intensity but provide a more emotionally satisfying conclusion for Heathcliff and Catherine’s tumultuous relationship. It would emphasize the themes of forgiveness and redemption, showing that even the most passionate and destructive love can find a moment of clarity and peace. This could give readers a sense of closure and a deeper emotional resonance, while still respecting the novel’s dark and tragic nature.
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I have dedicated five years of my life to studying literature, and I vividly remember what my professor said on the last day of my class "Literature is the only medium through which you can live more than once and the study of literature makes you tolerant towards others". When we read a literary teRead more
I have dedicated five years of my life to studying literature, and I vividly remember what my professor said on the last day of my class “Literature is the only medium through which you can live more than once and the study of literature makes you tolerant towards others”.
When we read a literary text, we’re not simply reading it, but living the life of someone else through the words written on the pages. You experience emotions such as grief, sadness, anger and happiness for characters that aren’t even real, you feel for them and that makes you tolerant towards people in real life.
All those famous writers we read, wrote during different times, under different political and cultural circumstances, many even faced exile and persecution for the simple act of writing what’s on their mind. Literature has a lot of power, it can shape the society and make it a better place but that would only be possible if people start giving literature the importance it deserves.
You read novels like Beloved, Things Fall Apart, One Hundred Years of Solitude, The Hungry Tide etc., and realize that life is not all about you. These novels gave me the chance to recognize my privilege and feel for the slaves that were treated like animals in the US, or how European Colonizers ruined perfectly well civilizations for their own gain. Reading these novels made me thankful that I didn’t have to endure such difficulties but it also helped me to see things from a different perspective.
When I’m sad, I pick up a copy of my favourite novel and it makes me realize that I’m not alone, the characters too are suffering and it indirectly means that the writer too, suffered, and that’s why he/she was able to write something so devastatingly beautiful. Literature makes me feel less lonely in an otherwise lonely world of mine.
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