:09:01
Hindley shall get what is due to him.
:09:07
Maybe more besides.
:09:10
Come on, lad.
:09:15
Come on.
:09:35
Despite Cathy's increasing affection
for Heathcliff...
:09:38
...I could see from the start that
his presence bred ill-feeling in the family.
:09:44
Less that two years
after his arrival at Wuthering Heights...
:09:48
...Mrs. Earnshaw died,
never having offered him a kindly word.
:09:53
Hindley, in his loneliness after her death...
:09:56
...had special cause to resent the Master's
strange affection for the child...
:10:01
...and soon came to regard his father
more as an oppressor than as a friend.
:10:06
-lt's the lad l've come to see you about.
-Hindley?
:10:11
What trouble has he been causing you?
:10:13
Why, none. His progress
gives every cause for satisfaction.
:10:19
Wish l could say the same for myself.
:10:23
-Why are you always so....
-Hard on the lad?
:10:27
Yes.
:10:28
He gets no more than he deserves.
:10:31
l think he deserves
rather more than he gets.
:10:34
-He'll never amount to anything.
-He might, if you let him go to college.
:10:41
College?
:10:42
A man needs an education these days.
:10:48
A man needs to be a man.
:10:50
Go on, pour it out.
:10:54
What's the cost
of this education nonsense?
:10:58
50 or 60.
:10:59
-What?
-A year, that is.