<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV</h2>
<p>For some days after that evening Mr. Heathcliff shunned
meeting us at meals; yet he would not consent formally to exclude
Hareton and Cathy. He had an aversion to yielding so
completely to his feelings, choosing rather to absent himself;
and eating once in twenty-four hours seemed sufficient sustenance
for him.</p>
<p>One night, after the family were in bed, I heard him go
downstairs, and out at the front door. I did not hear him
re-enter, and in the morning I found he was still away. We
were in April then: the weather was sweet and warm, the grass as
green as showers and sun could make it, and the two dwarf
apple-trees near the southern wall in full bloom. After
breakfast, Catherine insisted on my bringing a chair and sitting
with my work under the fir-trees at the end of the house; and she
beguiled Hareton, who had perfectly recovered from his accident,
to dig and arrange her little garden, which was shifted to that
corner by the influence of Joseph’s complaints. I was
comfortably revelling in the spring fragrance around, and the
beautiful soft blue overhead, when my young lady, who had run
down near the gate to procure some primrose roots for a border,
returned only half laden, and informed us that Mr. Heathcliff was
coming in. ‘And he spoke to me,’ she added,
with a perplexed countenance.</p>
<p>‘What did he say?’ asked Hareton.</p>
<p>‘He told me to begone as fast as I could,’ she
answered. ‘But he looked so different from his usual
look that I stopped a moment to stare at him.’</p>
<p>‘How?’ he inquired.</p>
<p>‘Why, almost bright and cheerful. No,
<i>almost</i> nothing—<i>very much</i> excited, and wild,
and glad!’ she replied.</p>
<p>‘Night-walking amuses him, then,’ I remarked,
affecting a careless manner: in reality as surprised as she was,
and anxious to ascertain the truth of her statement; for to see
the master looking glad would not be an every-day
spectacle. I framed an excuse to go in. Heathcliff
stood at the open door; he was pale, and he trembled: yet,
certainly, he had a strange joyful glitter in his eyes, that
altered the aspect of his whole face.</p>
<p>‘Will you have some breakfast?’ I said.
‘You must be hungry, rambling about all night!’
I wanted to discover where he had been, but I did not like to ask
directly.</p>
<p>‘No, I’m not hungry,’ he answered, averting
his head, and speaking rather contemptuously, as if he guessed I
was trying to divine the occasion of his good humour.</p>
<p>I felt perplexed: I didn’t know whether it were not a
proper opportunity to offer a bit of admonition.</p>
<p>‘I don’t think it right to wander out of
doors,’ I observed, ‘instead of being in bed: it is
not wise, at any rate this moist season. I daresay
you’ll catch a bad cold or a fever: you have something the
matter with you now!’</p>
<p>‘Nothing but what I can bear,’ he replied;
‘and with the greatest pleasure, provided you’ll
leave me alone: get in, and don’t annoy me.’</p>
<p>I obeyed: and, in passing, I noticed he breathed as fast as a
cat.</p>
<p>‘Yes!’ I reflected to myself, ‘we shall have
a fit of illness. I cannot conceive what he has been
doing.’</p>
<p>That noon he sat down to dinner with us, and received a
heaped-up plate from my hands, as if he intended to make amends
for previous fasting.</p>
<p>‘I’ve neither cold nor fever, Nelly,’ he
remarked, in allusion to my morning’s speech; ‘and
I’m ready to do justice to the food you give me.’</p>
<p>He took his knife and fork, and was going to commence eating,
when the inclination appeared to become suddenly extinct.
He laid them on the table, looked eagerly towards the window,
then rose and went out. We saw him walking to and fro in
the garden while we concluded our meal, and Earnshaw said
he’d go and ask why he would not dine: he thought we had
grieved him some way.</p>
<p>‘Well, is he coming?’ cried Catherine, when her
cousin returned.</p>
<p>‘Nay,’ he answered; ‘but he’s not
angry: he seemed rarely pleased indeed; only I made him impatient
by speaking to him twice; and then he bid me be off to you: he
wondered how I could want the company of anybody else.’</p>
<p>I set his plate to keep warm on the fender; and after an hour
or two he re-entered, when the room was clear, in no degree
calmer: the same unnatural—it was
unnatural—appearance of joy under his black brows; the same
bloodless hue, and his teeth visible, now and then, in a kind of
smile; his frame shivering, not as one shivers with chill or
weakness, but as a tight-stretched cord vibrates—a strong
thrilling, rather than trembling.</p>
<p>I will ask what is the matter, I thought; or who should?
And I exclaimed—‘Have you heard any good news, Mr.
Heathcliff? You look uncommonly animated.’</p>
<p>‘Where should good news come from to me?’ he
said. ‘I’m animated with hunger; and,
seemingly, I must not eat.’</p>
<p>‘Your dinner is here,’ I returned; ‘why
won’t you get it?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t want it now,’ he muttered, hastily:
‘I’ll wait till supper. And, Nelly, once for
all, let me beg you to warn Hareton and the other away from
me. I wish to be troubled by nobody: I wish to have this
place to myself.’</p>
<p>‘Is there some new reason for this banishment?’ I
inquired. ‘Tell me why you are so queer, Mr.
Heathcliff? Where were you last night? I’m not
putting the question through idle curiosity,
but—’</p>
<p>‘You are putting the question through very idle
curiosity,’ he interrupted, with a laugh. ‘Yet
I’ll answer it. Last night I was on the threshold of
hell. To-day, I am within sight of my heaven. I have
my eyes on it: hardly three feet to sever me! And now
you’d better go! You’ll neither see nor hear
anything to frighten you, if you refrain from prying.’</p>
<p>Having swept the hearth and wiped the table, I departed; more
perplexed than ever.</p>
<p>He did not quit the house again that afternoon, and no one
intruded on his solitude; till, at eight o’clock, I deemed
it proper, though unsummoned, to carry a candle and his supper to
him. He was leaning against the ledge of an open lattice,
but not looking out: his face was turned to the interior
gloom. The fire had smouldered to ashes; the room was
filled with the damp, mild air of the cloudy evening; and so
still, that not only the murmur of the beck down Gimmerton was
distinguishable, but its ripples and its gurgling over the
pebbles, or through the large stones which it could not
cover. I uttered an ejaculation of discontent at seeing the
dismal grate, and commenced shutting the casements, one after
another, till I came to his.</p>
<p>‘Must I close this?’ I asked, in order to rouse
him; for he would not stir.</p>
<p>The light flashed on his features as I spoke. Oh, Mr.
Lockwood, I cannot express what a terrible start I got by the
momentary view! Those deep black eyes! That smile,
and ghastly paleness! It appeared to me, not Mr.
Heathcliff, but a goblin; and, in my terror, I let the candle
bend towards the wall, and it left me in darkness.</p>
<p>‘Yes, close it,’ he replied, in his familiar
voice. ‘There, that is pure awkwardness! Why
did you hold the candle horizontally? Be quick, and bring
another.’</p>
<p>I hurried out in a foolish state of dread, and said to
Joseph—‘The master wishes you to take him a light and
rekindle the fire.’ For I dared not go in myself
again just then.</p>
<p>Joseph rattled some fire into the shovel, and went: but he
brought it back immediately, with the supper-tray in his other
hand, explaining that Mr. Heathcliff was going to bed, and he
wanted nothing to eat till morning. We heard him mount the
stairs directly; he did not proceed to his ordinary chamber, but
turned into that with the panelled bed: its window, as I
mentioned before, is wide enough for anybody to get through; and
it struck me that he plotted another midnight excursion, of which
he had rather we had no suspicion.</p>
<p>‘Is he a ghoul or a vampire?’ I mused. I had
read of such hideous incarnate demons. And then I set
myself to reflect how I had tended him in infancy, and watched
him grow to youth, and followed him almost through his whole
course; and what absurd nonsense it was to yield to that sense of
horror. ‘But where did he come from, the little dark
thing, harboured by a good man to his bane?’ muttered
Superstition, as I dozed into unconsciousness. And I began,
half dreaming, to weary myself with imagining some fit parentage
for him; and, repeating my waking meditations, I tracked his
existence over again, with grim variations; at last, picturing
his death and funeral: of which, all I can remember is, being
exceedingly vexed at having the task of dictating an inscription
for his monument, and consulting the sexton about it; and, as he
had no surname, and we could not tell his age, we were obliged to
content ourselves with the single word,
‘Heathcliff.’ That came true: we were. If
you enter the kirkyard, you’ll read, on his headstone, only
that, and the date of his death.</p>
<p>Dawn restored me to common sense. I rose, and went into
the garden, as soon as I could see, to ascertain if there were
any footmarks under his window. There were none.
‘He has stayed at home,’ I thought, ‘and
he’ll be all right to-day.’ I prepared
breakfast for the household, as was my usual custom, but told
Hareton and Catherine to get theirs ere the master came down, for
he lay late. They preferred taking it out of doors, under
the trees, and I set a little table to accommodate them.</p>
<p>On my re-entrance, I found Mr. Heathcliff below. He and
Joseph were conversing about some farming business; he gave
clear, minute directions concerning the matter discussed, but he
spoke rapidly, and turned his head continually aside, and had the
same excited expression, even more exaggerated. When Joseph
quitted the room he took his seat in the place he generally
chose, and I put a basin of coffee before him. He drew it
nearer, and then rested his arms on the table, and looked at the
opposite wall, as I supposed, surveying one particular portion,
up and down, with glittering, restless eyes, and with such eager
interest that he stopped breathing during half a minute
together.</p>
<p>‘Come now,’ I exclaimed, pushing some bread
against his hand, ‘eat and drink that, while it is hot: it
has been waiting near an hour.’</p>
<p>He didn’t notice me, and yet he smiled. I’d
rather have seen him gnash his teeth than smile so.</p>
<p>‘Mr. Heathcliff! master!’ I cried,
‘don’t, for God’s sake, stare as if you saw an
unearthly vision.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t, for God’s sake, shout so
loud,’ he replied. ‘Turn round, and tell me,
are we by ourselves?’</p>
<p>‘Of course,’ was my answer; ‘of course we
are.’</p>
<p>Still, I involuntarily obeyed him, as if I was not quite
sure. With a sweep of his hand he cleared a vacant space in
front among the breakfast things, and leant forward to gaze more
at his ease.</p>
<p>Now, I perceived he was not looking at the wall; for when I
regarded him alone, it seemed exactly that he gazed at something
within two yards’ distance. And whatever it was, it
communicated, apparently, both pleasure and pain in exquisite
extremes: at least the anguished, yet raptured, expression of his
countenance suggested that idea. The fancied object was not
fixed, either: his eyes pursued it with unwearied diligence, and,
even in speaking to me, were never weaned away. I vainly
reminded him of his protracted abstinence from food: if he
stirred to touch anything in compliance with my entreaties, if he
stretched his hand out to get a piece of bread, his fingers
clenched before they reached it, and remained on the table,
forgetful of their aim.</p>
<p>I sat, a model of patience, trying to attract his absorbed
attention from its engrossing speculation; till he grew
irritable, and got up, asking why I would not allow him to have
his own time in taking his meals? and saying that on the next
occasion I needn’t wait: I might set the things down and
go. Having uttered these words he left the house, slowly
sauntered down the garden path, and disappeared through the
gate.</p>
<p>The hours crept anxiously by: another evening came. I
did not retire to rest till late, and when I did, I could not
sleep. He returned after midnight, and, instead of going to
bed, shut himself into the room beneath. I listened, and
tossed about, and, finally, dressed and descended. It was
too irksome to lie there, harassing my brain with a hundred idle
misgivings.</p>
<p>I distinguished Mr. Heathcliff’s step, restlessly
measuring the floor, and he frequently broke the silence by a
deep inspiration, resembling a groan. He muttered detached
words also; the only one I could catch was the name of Catherine,
coupled with some wild term of endearment or suffering; and
spoken as one would speak to a person present; low and earnest,
and wrung from the depth of his soul. I had not courage to
walk straight into the apartment; but I desired to divert him
from his reverie, and therefore fell foul of the kitchen fire,
stirred it, and began to scrape the cinders. It drew him
forth sooner than I expected. He opened the door
immediately, and said—‘Nelly, come here—is it
morning? Come in with your light.’</p>
<p>‘It is striking four,’ I answered.
‘You want a candle to take up-stairs: you might have lit
one at this fire.’</p>
<p>‘No, I don’t wish to go up-stairs,’ he
said. ‘Come in, and kindle <i>me</i> a fire, and do
anything there is to do about the room.’</p>
<p>‘I must blow the coals red first, before I can carry
any,’ I replied, getting a chair and the bellows.</p>
<p>He roamed to and fro, meantime, in a state approaching
distraction; his heavy sighs succeeding each other so thick as to
leave no space for common breathing between.</p>
<p>‘When day breaks I’ll send for Green,’ he
said; ‘I wish to make some legal inquiries of him while I
can bestow a thought on those matters, and while I can act
calmly. I have not written my will yet; and how to leave my
property I cannot determine. I wish I could annihilate it
from the face of the earth.’</p>
<p>‘I would not talk so, Mr. Heathcliff,’ I
interposed. ‘Let your will be a while: you’ll
be spared to repent of your many injustices yet! I never
expected that your nerves would be disordered: they are, at
present, marvellously so, however; and almost entirely through
your own fault. The way you’ve passed these three
last days might knock up a Titan. Do take some food, and
some repose. You need only look at yourself in a glass to
see how you require both. Your cheeks are hollow, and your
eyes blood-shot, like a person starving with hunger and going
blind with loss of sleep.’</p>
<p>‘It is not my fault that I cannot eat or rest,’ he
replied. ‘I assure you it is through no settled
designs. I’ll do both, as soon as I possibly
can. But you might as well bid a man struggling in the
water rest within arms’ length of the shore! I must
reach it first, and then I’ll rest. Well, never mind
Mr. Green: as to repenting of my injustices, I’ve done no
injustice, and I repent of nothing. I’m too happy;
and yet I’m not happy enough. My soul’s bliss
kills my body, but does not satisfy itself.’</p>
<p>‘Happy, master?’ I cried. ‘Strange
happiness! If you would hear me without being angry, I
might offer some advice that would make you happier.’</p>
<p>‘What is that?’ he asked. ‘Give
it.’</p>
<p>‘You are aware, Mr. Heathcliff,’ I said,
‘that from the time you were thirteen years old you have
lived a selfish, unchristian life; and probably hardly had a
Bible in your hands during all that period. You must have
forgotten the contents of the book, and you may not have space to
search it now. Could it be hurtful to send for some
one—some minister of any denomination, it does not matter
which—to explain it, and show you how very far you have
erred from its precepts; and how unfit you will be for its
heaven, unless a change takes place before you die?’</p>
<p>‘I’m rather obliged than angry, Nelly,’ he
said, ‘for you remind me of the manner in which I desire to
be buried. It is to be carried to the churchyard in the
evening. You and Hareton may, if you please, accompany me:
and mind, particularly, to notice that the sexton obeys my
directions concerning the two coffins! No minister need
come; nor need anything be said over me.—I tell you I have
nearly attained <i>my</i> heaven; and that of others is
altogether unvalued and uncoveted by me.’</p>
<p>‘And supposing you persevered in your obstinate fast,
and died by that means, and they refused to bury you in the
precincts of the kirk?’ I said, shocked at his godless
indifference. ‘How would you like it?’</p>
<p>‘They won’t do that,’ he replied: ‘if
they did, you must have me removed secretly; and if you neglect
it you shall prove, practically, that the dead are not
annihilated!’</p>
<p>As soon as he heard the other members of the family stirring
he retired to his den, and I breathed freer. But in the
afternoon, while Joseph and Hareton were at their work, he came
into the kitchen again, and, with a wild look, bid me come and
sit in the house: he wanted somebody with him. I declined;
telling him plainly that his strange talk and manner frightened
me, and I had neither the nerve nor the will to be his companion
alone.</p>
<p>‘I believe you think me a fiend,’ he said, with
his dismal laugh: ‘something too horrible to live under a
decent roof.’ Then turning to Catherine, who was
there, and who drew behind me at his approach, he added, half
sneeringly,—‘Will <i>you</i> come, chuck?
I’ll not hurt you. No! to you I’ve made myself
worse than the devil. Well, there is <i>one</i> who
won’t shrink from my company! By God! she’s
relentless. Oh, damn it! It’s unutterably too
much for flesh and blood to bear—even mine.’</p>
<p>He solicited the society of no one more. At dusk he went
into his chamber. Through the whole night, and far into the
morning, we heard him groaning and murmuring to himself.
Hareton was anxious to enter; but I bid him fetch Mr. Kenneth,
and he should go in and see him. When he came, and I
requested admittance and tried to open the door, I found it
locked; and Heathcliff bid us be damned. He was better, and
would be left alone; so the doctor went away.</p>
<p>The following evening was very wet: indeed, it poured down
till day-dawn; and, as I took my morning walk round the house, I
observed the master’s window swinging open, and the rain
driving straight in. He cannot be in bed, I thought: those
showers would drench him through. He must either be up or
out. But I’ll make no more ado, I’ll go boldly
and look.’</p>
<p>Having succeeded in obtaining entrance with another key, I ran
to unclose the panels, for the chamber was vacant; quickly
pushing them aside, I peeped in. Mr. Heathcliff was
there—laid on his back. His eyes met mine so keen and
fierce, I started; and then he seemed to smile. I could not
think him dead: but his face and throat were washed with rain;
the bed-clothes dripped, and he was perfectly still. The
lattice, flapping to and fro, had grazed one hand that rested on
the sill; no blood trickled from the broken skin, and when I put
my fingers to it, I could doubt no more: he was dead and
stark!</p>
<p>I hasped the window; I combed his black long hair from his
forehead; I tried to close his eyes: to extinguish, if possible,
that frightful, life-like gaze of exultation before any one else
beheld it. They would not shut: they seemed to sneer at my
attempts; and his parted lips and sharp white teeth sneered
too! Taken with another fit of cowardice, I cried out for
Joseph. Joseph shuffled up and made a noise, but resolutely
refused to meddle with him.</p>
<p>‘Th’ divil’s harried off his soul,’ he
cried, ‘and he may hev’ his carcass into t’
bargin, for aught I care! Ech! what a wicked ’un he
looks, girning at death!’ and the old sinner grinned in
mockery. I thought he intended to cut a caper round the
bed; but suddenly composing himself, he fell on his knees, and
raised his hands, and returned thanks that the lawful master and
the ancient stock were restored to their rights.</p>
<p>I felt stunned by the awful event; and my memory unavoidably
recurred to former times with a sort of oppressive sadness.
But poor Hareton, the most wronged, was the only one who really
suffered much. He sat by the corpse all night, weeping in
bitter earnest. He pressed its hand, and kissed the
sarcastic, savage face that every one else shrank from
contemplating; and bemoaned him with that strong grief which
springs naturally from a generous heart, though it be tough as
tempered steel.</p>
<p>Mr. Kenneth was perplexed to pronounce of what disorder the
master died. I concealed the fact of his having swallowed
nothing for four days, fearing it might lead to trouble, and
then, I am persuaded, he did not abstain on purpose: it was the
consequence of his strange illness, not the cause.</p>
<p>We buried him, to the scandal of the whole neighbourhood, as
he wished. Earnshaw and I, the sexton, and six men to carry
the coffin, comprehended the whole attendance. The six men
departed when they had let it down into the grave: we stayed to
see it covered. Hareton, with a streaming face, dug green
sods, and laid them over the brown mould himself: at present it
is as smooth and verdant as its companion mounds—and I hope
its tenant sleeps as soundly. But the country folks, if you
ask them, would swear on the Bible that he <i>walks</i>: there
are those who speak to having met him near the church, and on the
moor, and even within this house. Idle tales, you’ll
say, and so say I. Yet that old man by the kitchen fire
affirms he has seen two on ’em looking out of his chamber
window on every rainy night since his death:—and an odd
thing happened to me about a month ago. I was going to the
Grange one evening—a dark evening, threatening
thunder—and, just at the turn of the Heights, I encountered
a little boy with a sheep and two lambs before him; he was crying
terribly; and I supposed the lambs were skittish, and would not
be guided.</p>
<p>‘What is the matter, my little man?’ I asked.</p>
<p>‘There’s Heathcliff and a woman yonder, under
t’ nab,’ he blubbered, ‘un’ I darnut pass
’em.’</p>
<p>I saw nothing; but neither the sheep nor he would go on so I
bid him take the road lower down. He probably raised the
phantoms from thinking, as he traversed the moors alone, on the
nonsense he had heard his parents and companions repeat.
Yet, still, I don’t like being out in the dark now; and I
don’t like being left by myself in this grim house: I
cannot help it; I shall be glad when they leave it, and shift to
the Grange.</p>
<p>‘They are going to the Grange, then?’ I said.</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ answered Mrs. Dean, ‘as soon as they
are married, and that will be on New Year’s Day.’</p>
<p>‘And who will live here then?’</p>
<p>‘Why, Joseph will take care of the house, and, perhaps,
a lad to keep him company. They will live in the kitchen,
and the rest will be shut up.’</p>
<p>‘For the use of such ghosts as choose to inhabit
it?’ I observed.</p>
<p>‘No, Mr. Lockwood,’ said Nelly, shaking her
head. ‘I believe the dead are at peace: but it is not
right to speak of them with levity.’</p>
<p>At that moment the garden gate swung to; the ramblers were
returning.</p>
<p>‘<i>They</i> are afraid of nothing,’ I grumbled,
watching their approach through the window.
‘Together, they would brave Satan and all his
legions.’</p>
<p>As they stepped on to the door-stones, and halted to take a
last look at the moon—or, more correctly, at each other by
her light—I felt irresistibly impelled to escape them
again; and, pressing a remembrance into the hand of Mrs. Dean,
and disregarding her expostulations at my rudeness, I vanished
through the kitchen as they opened the house-door; and so should
have confirmed Joseph in his opinion of his
fellow-servant’s gay indiscretions, had he not fortunately
recognised me for a respectable character by the sweet ring of a
sovereign at his feet.</p>
<p>My walk home was lengthened by a diversion in the direction of
the kirk. When beneath its walls, I perceived decay had
made progress, even in seven months: many a window showed black
gaps deprived of glass; and slates jutted off here and there,
beyond the right line of the roof, to be gradually worked off in
coming autumn storms.</p>
<p>I sought, and soon discovered, the three headstones on the
slope next the moor: the middle one grey, and half buried in the
heath; Edgar Linton’s only harmonized by the turf and moss
creeping up its foot; Heathcliff’s still bare.</p>
<p>I lingered round them, under that benign sky: watched the
moths fluttering among the heath and harebells, listened to the
soft wind breathing through the grass, and wondered how any one
could ever imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that
quiet earth.</p>
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