Quote:
Originally Posted by hankster
Thats what i say!
I did go see WH The Musical here on college campus - i cant say it helped much. My pea brain keeps thinking there should be some connection between Heathcliff the person and the heath on the cliffs.
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No idea. I haven't finished it yet, but my guess is that Heathcliff is a rather uncultivated, wild individual--a gypsy of sorts; very rough around the edges personality-wise (huge understatement--rather dark and dangerous actually). And Heath works better as a name than Moor I suppose. Certainly the names of the houses, Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange, are symbolic. I suspect Bronte was using his name symbolically also.