DIE in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
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 Current Search - die in Wuthering Heights
1  He died blissfully, Mr. Lockwood: he died so.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXVIII
2  By that means, it could not fall to Mr. Heathcliff should Linton die.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXVIII
3  Mr. Kenneth was perplexed to pronounce of what disorder the master died.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXXIV
4  He died quietly in his chair one October evening, seated by the fire-side.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER V
5  You can feel in yourself it is impossible that a person should die for love of a stranger.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXII
6  But the poor dame had reason to repent of her kindness: she and her husband both took the fever, and died within a few days of each other.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER IX
7  Fortunately its mother died before the time arrived; some thirteen years after the decease of Catherine, when Linton was twelve, or a little more.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XVII
8  We deferred our excursion till the afternoon; a golden afternoon of August: every breath from the hills so full of life, that it seemed whoever respired it, though dying, might revive.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXVII
9  Mrs. Linton, on the third day, unbarred her door, and having finished the water in her pitcher and decanter, desired a renewed supply, and a basin of gruel, for she believed she was dying.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XII
10  What her last illness was, I am not certain: I conjecture, they died of the same thing, a kind of fever, slow at its commencement, but incurable, and rapidly consuming life towards the close.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XVIII
11  I could not picture a father treating a dying child as tyrannically and wickedly as I afterwards learned Heathcliff had treated him, to compel this apparent eagerness: his efforts redoubling the more imminently his avaricious and unfeeling plans were threatened with defeat by death.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXV