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Index
Cover About the Editor Norton Critical Editions: Victorian Era Title Page Copyright Contents Preface to the Fifth Edition: “Spirits so Lost and Fallen” The Text of Wuthering Heights
Volume I, Chapter I–XIV Volume II, Chapter I–XX
Backgrounds and Contexts
Emily Brontë’s Diary Papers and Devoirs
Editor’s Note: Emily Brontë’s Diary Emily Brontë’s Diary
November 24, 1834 June 26, 1837 July 30, 1841 July 30, 1845
Editor’s Note: Emily Brontë’s Devoirs
The Cat The Butterfly
The 1847 First Edition of Wuthering Heights
Editor’s Note: Publishing the 1847 Wuthering Heights Letters
C. Brontë to Messrs Aylott and Jones, 6 April 1846 Currer Bell to Henry Colburn, 4 July 1846 C. Bell to W. S. Williams, 10 November 1847 C. Bell to W. S. Williams, 14 December 1847 C. Bell to W. S. Williams, 21 December 1847 T. C. Newby to ?Emily J. Brontë [Ellis Bell], 15 February 1848
Editor’s Note: Reviews of the 1847 Wuthering Heights
[H. F. Chorley] • Athenaeum, December 25, 1847 Atlas, January 1848 Douglas Jerrold’s Weekly Newspaper, January 1848 Examiner, January 1848 Britannia, January 1848 [Unidentified Review] New Monthly Magazine, January 1848 [Sydney Dobell] • Palladium, September 1850 [E. P. Whipple] • North American Review, October 1848
The 1850 Second Edition of Wuthering Heights
Editor’s Note: The 1850 Wuthering Heights The Second Edition in Progress: Letters from Charlotte Brontë
To W. S. Williams, 5 September 1850 To James Taylor, 5 September 1850 To W. S. Williams, 10 September 1850 To W. S. Williams, 13 September 1850 To W. S. Williams, 20 September 1850 To W. S. Williams, 27 September 1850 To W. S. Williams, [?c. 19 November 1850] To Sydney Dobell, 8 December 1850
[Charlotte Brontë] • Biographical Notice of Ellis and Acton Bell, by Currer Bell (1850) [Charlotte Brontë] • Editor’s Preface to the New Edition of Wuthering Heights (1850) Editor’s Note: Emily Brontë’s Poems for the 1850 Wuthering Heights [Charlotte Brontë] • Selections from the Literary Remains of Ellis and Acton Bell (1850) Ellis Bell • Poems
40 [A little while, a little while] 42 [The bluebell is the sweetest flower] 39 [Loud without the wind was roaring] 84 [Shall Earth no more inspire thee] 79 [The night wind] 85 [Aye there it is! It wakes to night] 128 [Love is like the wild rose briar] 112 [From a Dungeon Wall] 106 [How few, of all the hearts that loved] 98 [In the earth, the earth thou shalt be laid] 35 [Song by J. Brenzaida to G.S.] 32 [For him who struck thy foreign string] 120a [Heavy hangs the raindrop] 120b [Child of Delight!] 123 [Silent is the House] 89 [I do not weep] 201 [Stanzas] 125 [No coward soul is mine]
Editor’s Note: Reviews of the 1850 Wuthering Heights
Examiner, December 21, 1850 [G. H. Lewes] • Leader, December 28, 1850 [H. F. Chorley] • Athenaeum, December 28, 1850 Eclectic Review, February 1851
Emily Brontë’s Poetry: A Further Selection
Editor’s Note: On Grief and Remembrance (Emily Brontë’s Other Poetry) Ellis Bell • Poems
116 [Remembrance] 108 [To Imagination] 77 [If greif for greif can touch thee]
Criticism
Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar • Looking Oppositely: Emily Brontë’s Bible of Hell Martha C. Nussbaum • The Romantic Ascent: Emily Brontë Ivan Kreilkamp • Petted Things: Cruelty and Sympathy in the Brontës Alexandra Lewis • Memory Possessed: Trauma and Pathologies of Remembrance in Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights Janis McLarren Caldwell • Wuthering Heights and Domestic Medicine: The Child’s Body and the Book
Emily Brontë: A Chronology Selected Bibliography
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