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Which two details support the central idea of Heathcliff's plight as an outsider?

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Not a soul knew to whom the child belonged. . . ." (paragraph 1)"He seemed a sullen, patient child, hardened, perhaps, to ill-treatment."
User Michael Longhurst
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Answer:

Not a soul knew to whom the child belonged. . . ." (paragraph 1)

"He seemed a sullen, patient child, hardened, perhaps, to ill-treatment." (paragraph 4)

Step-by-step explanation:

Unlike every other character in the novel, Heathcliff has only a single name that serves him as both Christian name and surname. This places him radically outside social patterns and conventions, and Heathcliff is described by Catherine as an 'unreclaimed creature'

User Tyler Pantuso
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