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 뻠    ( B1)           .  ,    ,    .          .





 .  

    



  



 , ,2025



ISBN978-5-0068-6099-5

     Ridero


The story begins in1801when agentleman named Mr. Lockwood arrives inthe wild countryside ofYorkshire.

  1801,          .



He rents ahouse called Thrushcross Grange from amysterious man named Heathcliff, who lives four miles away at Wuthering Heights.

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The moors stretch out inevery direction, covered with heather and whipped bystrong winds.

    ,     .



The trees grow bent and twisted from years ofstorms.

    .



Lockwood is apolite man from the city who hopes for peace and quiet, but he soon discovers that life here is anything but calm.

䠖   ,   ,   ,     .



One cold afternoon, Lockwood walks toWuthering Heights tovisit his landlord.

     -,    .



The house stands alone on the hill, built ofdark stone.

   ,   .



Snow lies deep around it, and the sky is grey.

   ,  .



Asign above the door says Wuthering Heights and the date 1500.

    Wuthering Heights  1500.



Inside, the rooms are cold and bare.

   .



Huge dogs guard the entrance, growling at strangers.

   ,  .



Heathcliff greets Lockwood with few words.

   .



He is tall and dark, with black hair and sharp eyes that seem tolook right through people.

  ,    ,     .



His voice is deep and rough.

   .



Two other people live there: ayoung woman named Catherine, who is beautiful but speaks sharply, and astrong young man named Hareton Earnshaw, who works like aservant and says almost nothing.

   :    , ,  ,      ,      .



Lockwood stays longer than he planned.

  ,  .



Asnowstorm starts, and the roads become impossible.

  ,   .



Heathcliff does not invite him tostay, but there is no choice.

   , .



The old servant Joseph shows Lockwood toasmall bedroom upstairs.

       .



The room has not been used for years.

  .



There is an old bed with curtains, achair, and some books on ashelf.

    ,    .



Lockwood notices names carved into the wood: Catherine Earnshaw, Catherine Heathcliff, Catherine Linton.

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He falls asleep reading an old diary that belongs toCatherine Earnshaw.

 ,   ,   .



Inthe diary, she writes about her childhood with her brother Hindley and aboy named Heathcliff.

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She describes how Hindley hated Heathcliff and treated him badly after their father died.

 ,          .



That night, Lockwood has aterrible dream.

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He hears the wind shaking the window.

 ,    .



Abranch taps against the glass like fingers.

  ,  .



Then he sees achilds hand reach through the broken window.

    ,    .



The hand is ice-cold.

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Avoice cries, Let me in! Let me in! Ive been wandering on the moors for twenty years. Iam Catherine Linton!

 :  ! !     . ߠ  !



Lockwood screams infear.

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Heathcliff runs into the room.

  .



When he hears the name, his face changes.

   ,   .



He pushes Lockwood away and opens the window wide.

     .



He shouts into the storm, Come in, Cathy! Come back tome!

  : , !   !



Tears run down his face, but only the wind answers.

   ,   .



The night passes insilence after that.

    .



The next morning, Lockwood walks back through the snow toThrushcross Grange.

      -.



The cold makes him ill, and he stays inbed for weeks.

     .



The housekeeper, Ellen Dean everyone calls her Nelly brings him soup and sits bythe fire.

      蠖     .



Nelly has worked for both families all her life.

     .



She knows every secret.

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While Lockwood rests, he asks her totell the story ofWuthering Heights.

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Nelly begins at the beginning, many years before.

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Old Mr. Earnshaw was the master ofWuthering Heights.

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He had two children: Hindley, aboy offourteen, and Catherine, awild girl ofsix.

Ӡ   :     .



One day Mr. Earnshaw went toLiverpool on business.

     .



When he returned, he brought adirty, dark-haired boy he found starving inthe streets.

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He said the boys name was Heathcliff and that he would live with them as family.

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Mrs. Earnshaw was angry.

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She wanted tothrow the boy out, but her husband protectedhim.

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