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.

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

You can hear this line at 00:55:39 in the radio play.

Quote context

[...]

- 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.

- If you ask me, the safest way to cross those moors is in an aeroplane.

[...]