Well, whatever Cathy's faults, she was one of the most real characters I've ever come across.

7 seconds sound clip from the Wuthering Heights (1939)) classic radio play.

You can hear this line at 00:55:34 in the radio play.

Quote context

[...]

- We're back in the present, with Barbara Stanwyck, Brian Aherne and Ida Lupino at our microphones.

- But it seems to me that they all look just a little bit stirred by the drama they just brought us.

- It's a moving play, but, more than that, I think, it has a lesson today for every woman. It shows the necessity of holding on to one's ideals.

- But Cathy gave up what she really wanted for position and security. That's a common failing among women, isn't it?

- Mm, on the contrary. I think women are less likely than men to sidetrack their ideals.

- Well, whatever Cathy's faults, she was one of the most real characters I've ever come across.

- Yes, if you know the story of 'Wuthering Heights,' I imagine it'd be pretty easy to hear the voices of Cathy and Heathcliff out on those moorlands when the winds begin to howl.

- What about it, Brian? You've been there.

- Well, that wind is one of the weirdest sounds I've ever heard. It's no place to be at night.

- Mm, no place for my Irish imagination. Nor for anybody's without a good big flashlight.

[...]