PURPOSE in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
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 Current Search - purpose in Wuthering Heights
1  Mr. Heathcliff purposely avoids me: I have hardly seen him at all.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXIV
2  Then he took the two horses, and led them into the stables; reappearing for the purpose of locking the outer gate, as if we lived in an ancient castle.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIII
3  Her father sat reading at the table; and I, on purpose, had sought a bit of work in some unripped fringes of the window-curtain, keeping my eye steadily fixed on her proceedings.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXI
4  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.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXXIV
5  I have passed it really in my walks, twice or thrice; it lies in a hollow, between two hills: an elevated hollow, near a swamp, whose peaty moisture is said to answer all the purposes of embalming on the few corpses deposited there.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER III
6  I leant forward also, for the purpose of signing to Heathcliff, whose step I recognised, not to come further; and, at the instant when my eye quitted Hareton, he gave a sudden spring, delivered himself from the careless grasp that held him, and fell.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER IX
7  He sighed and moaned like one under great suffering, and kept it up for a quarter of an hour; on purpose to distress his cousin apparently, for whenever he caught a stifled sob from her he put renewed pain and pathos into the inflexions of his voice.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXIII
8  The pettishness that might be caressed into fondness, had yielded to a listless apathy; there was less of the peevish temper of a child which frets and teases on purpose to be soothed, and more of the self-absorbed moroseness of a confirmed invalid, repelling consolation, and ready to regard the good-humoured mirth of others as an insult.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXVI
9  Happily, an inhabitant of the kitchen made more despatch: a lusty dame, with tucked-up gown, bare arms, and fire-flushed cheeks, rushed into the midst of us flourishing a frying-pan: and used that weapon, and her tongue, to such purpose, that the storm subsided magically, and she only remained, heaving like a sea after a high wind, when her master entered on the scene.
Wuthering Heights By Emily Bronte
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER I