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- Wuthering Heights
- 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 Wut
- 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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