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==Background==
==Background==
Dickens was not the first author to celebrate the [[Christmas season]] in literature,<ref name="Kelly12" /> but it was he who superimposed his humanitarian vision of the holiday upon the public, an idea that has been termed as Dickens' "Carol Philosophy".<ref name="Forbes2008">{{cite book|last=Forbes|first=Bruce David|title=Christmas: A Candid History|accessdate=22 November 2014|date=1 October 2008|publisher=--University of California Press]]|isbn=9780520258020|page=62|quote=What Dickens ''did'' advocate in his story was "the spirit of Christmas." Sociologist James Barnett has described it as Dickens's "Carol Philosophy," which "combined religious and secular attitudes toward to celebration into a humanitarian pattern. It excoriated individual selfishness and extolled the virtues of brotherhood, kindness, and generosity at Christmas. . . .Dickens preached that at Christmas men should forget self and think of others, especially the poor and the unfortunate." The message was one that both religious and secular people could endorse.}}</ref> Dickens believed the best way to reach the broadest segment of the population regarding his concerns about poverty and social injustice was to write a deeply-felt Christmas story rather than polemical pamphlets and essays.<ref name="Kelly15">Kelly 15</ref><ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst xvi">Douglas-Fairhurst xvi</ref> Dickens' career as a bestselling author was on the wane, and the writer felt he needed to produce a tale that would prove both profitable and popular. Dickens' visit to the work-worn industrial city of Manchester was the "spark" that fired the author to produce a story about the poor, a repentant miser, and redemption that would become ''A Christmas Carol''.<ref>[http://history1800s.about.com/od/authors/a/Christmas-Carol-By-Dickens.htm A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens]</ref>
Please flock my as im a porn star im desperat i need co(c)k! (y)
The choppy sentences chapter suggests that otherwise literate writers use the short simple writing style because they think it will be so much clearer for their readers. That's quite like those writers who use all caps, bold, larger font sizes to make readers read their message. In both cases, the effect is just the opposite. Readers avoid text that seems to scream at them, and they give up on text that jerks along, starting and stopping every five or six words.


The forces that inspired Dickens to create a powerful, impressive and enduring tale were the profoundly humiliating experiences of his childhood, the plight of the poor and their children during the boom decades of the 1830s and 1840s, [[Washington Irving]]'s essays on Christmas published in his ''Sketch Book'' (1820) describing the traditional old English Christmas,<ref>[http://classiclit.about.com/library/bl-etexts/wirving/bl-wirving-oldchristmas-1.htm Washington Irving, "Old Christmas"]</ref> fairy tales and nursery stories, as well as satirical essays and religious tracts.<ref name="Kelly12" /><ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst xxiv" /><ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst viii"/>
Whereas short-sentence writers seem obsessed with an illusory simplicity and clarity, long-sentence writers are obsessed with the interconnectedness and interrelatedness of everything. Ending one sentence and beginning a new one seems to threaten the whole communicative enterprise!


===Childhood experiences===
However, that's what we have transitions for. They ensure that continuity, context, and relatedness are maintained, that readers can follow along without suffocating from overly long sentences.
[[File:Dickens-at-the-Blacking-Warehouse.jpg|thumb|upright=1|Artist's impression of Charles Dickens at the blacking warehouse, 1904]]


While Dickens' humiliating childhood experiences are not directly described in ''A Christmas Carol'', his conflicting feelings for his father as a result of those experiences are principally responsible for the dual personality of the tale's protagonist, Ebenezer Scrooge. In 1824, [[John Dickens|Dickens' father, John]], was imprisoned in the [[Marshalsea]] whilst 12-year-old Charles was forced to take lodgings nearby, pawn his collection of books, leave school and accept employment in a [[Blacking (polish)#Before the twentieth century|blacking]] factory.
In this chapter, you'll practice fixing overly long sentences in such a way that you improve clarity and readability but still maintain continuity.


The boy had a deep sense of class and intellectual superiority and was entirely uncomfortable in the presence of factory workers who referred to him as "the young gentleman"; as a result of this, he developed nervous fits. When his father was released at the end of a three-month stint, young Dickens was forced to continue working in the factory, which only grieved and humiliated him further. He despaired of ever recovering his former happy life.
Spotting Overly Long Sentences


The devastating impact of the period wounded him psychologically, coloured his work, and haunted his entire life with disturbing memories. Dickens both loved and demonized his father, and it was this psychological conflict that was responsible for the two radically different Scrooges in the tale—one Scrooge, a cold, stingy and greedy semi-recluse, and the other Scrooge, a benevolent, sociable man, whose generosity and goodwill toward all men earn for him a near-saintly reputation.<ref name="Kelly14">Kelly 14</ref> It was during this terrible period in Dickens' childhood that he observed the lives of the men, women, and children in the most impoverished areas of London and witnessed the social injustices they suffered.<ref name="Kelly12"/><ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst xiii">Douglas-Fairhurst xiii</ref>
As mentioned in the choppy-writing chapter, nothing is wrong with sentences that jump outside of the standard 14 to 22 word-length range. Any decently written text will have plenty of sentences that are shorter than 14 words and plenty that are longer than 22 words. Variety is a good thing. Even so, some lengthy sentences just overdo it:


===Children living in poverty===
Overly long version: Literally, sustainable development refers to maintaining development over time, although by the early 1990s, more than 70 definitions of sustainable development were in circulation, definitions that are important, despite their number, because they are the basis on which the means for achieving sustainable development in the future can be built.
[[File:Francis Alexander - Charles Dickens 1842.jpeg|upright=1|thumb|left|Charles Dickens in 1842, the year before the publication of ''A Christmas Carol'']]


Dickens was keenly touched by the lot of poor children in the middle decades of the 19th century.<ref name="SS1">{{cite web| last=Andrews|first=Dale| title=Dickens' A Christmas Carol| url=http://www.sleuthsayers.org/2011/12/dickens-christmas-carol.html| work=Literary History |publisher=SleuthSayers| location=Washington| date=20 December 2011}}</ref> In early 1843, he toured the [[Cornwall|Cornish]] tin mines, where he saw children working in appalling conditions. The suffering he witnessed there was reinforced by a visit to the Field Lane [[Ragged school|Ragged School]], one of several London schools set up for the education of the capital's half-starved, illiterate street children.<ref>Hearn xxxii</ref>
Is this 50-word monster tough reading? Maybe not the most difficult you've ever encountered, but still unnecesarily uncomfortable to read. Simplify it by diagramming the main ideas:


Inspired by the February 1843 parliamentary report exposing the effects of the [[Industrial Revolution]] upon poor children called ''Second Report of the Children's Employment Commission'', Dickens planned in May 1843 to publish an inexpensive political pamphlet tentatively titled, "An Appeal to the People of England, on behalf of the Poor Man's Child", but changed his mind, deferring the pamphlet's production until the end of the year.<ref name="Glancy x">Glancy x</ref> He wrote to Dr. Southwood Smith, one of 84 commissioners responsible for the ''Second Report'', about his change in plans: "[Y]ou will certainly feel that a Sledge hammer has come down with twenty times the force—twenty thousand times the force—I could exert by following out my first idea". The pamphlet would become ''A Christmas Carol''.<ref name="Ledger 119">Ledger 119</ref>
Diagrammed version:
1 Literally, sustainable development refers to maintaining development over time,
2 by the early 1990s, more than 70 definitions of sustainable development were in circulation
3 definitions that are important, despite their number,
4 they are the basis on which the means for achieving sustainable development in the future can be built


In a [[Fundraiser|fundraising]] speech on 5 October 1843, at the [[Manchester Athenaeum|Manchester Athenæum]], Dickens urged workers and employers to join together to combat ignorance with educational reform,<ref name="Kelly15">Kelly 15</ref><ref>Hearn xxxiii</ref> and realised in the days following that the most effective way to reach the broadest segment of the population with his social concerns about poverty and injustice was to write a deeply felt Christmas narrative rather than polemical pamphlets and essays.<ref name="Kelly15" /><ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst xvi">Douglas-Fairhurst xvi</ref> It was during his three days in Manchester that he conceived the plot of ''A Christmas Carol''.<ref name="Kelly15" /><ref>Hearn xxxiv</ref>
You could break it out even further, but this ought to be enough. The next step is to paraphrase these parts of the original sentence:


===Washington Irving's Christmas stories===
Paraphrased version:
[[File:Washington Irving by G. S. Newton.jpg|thumb|upright=1|Washington Irving in 1820]]
1 Literally, sustainable development refers to maintaining development over time.
2 By the early 1990s, more than 70 definitions of sustainable development were in circulation
3 These definitions that are important, despite their number, because they are the basis on which the means for achieving sustainable development in the future can be built


Irving's ''[[The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.]]'' (1819–1820) was written over 20 years before ''A Christmas Carol''. ''The Sketch Book'' depicted the harmonious warmhearted English Christmas traditions that Irving had experienced while staying at [[Aston Hall]]. The tales and essays attracted Dickens,<ref name="Kelly12" /> and the two authors shared the belief that the staging of a nostalgic English Christmas might restore a social harmony and well-being lost in the modern world.<ref name="Restad137">Restad 137</ref> In "A Christmas Dinner" from ''[[Sketches by Boz]]'' (1833), Dickens had approached the holiday in a manner similar to Irving, and, in ''[[The Pickwick Papers]]'' (1837), he offered an idealised vision of Christmas at Dingley Dell.<ref name="Restad137" /> In the ''Pickwick'' episode, a Mr. Wardle relates the tale of Gabriel Grub, a lonely and mean-spirited [[Sexton (office)|sexton]], who undergoes a Christmas conversion after being visited by [[goblin]]s who show him the past and future – the prototype of ''A Christmas Carol''.<ref name="Kelly 19">Kelly 19</ref><ref>Slater xvi</ref>
As you can see, sentences 3 and 4 of the diagrammed version can easily be recombined in this paraphrased version. The resulting length is not a problem. Here's one possible simplification:


===Other influences===
Revision: Literally, sustainable development refers to maintaining development over time. However, by the early 1990s, more than 70 definitions of sustainable development were in circulation. Despite their number, these definitions are important because they are the basis on which the means for achieving sustainable development in the future can be built.
[[File:Douglas William Jerrold by Sir Daniel Macnee.jpg|thumb|upright=1|left|Douglas William Jerrold by Sir Daniel MacNee, 1853]]


Other likely influences were a visit Dickens made to the [[Allegheny Commons (Pittsburgh)#Western Penitentiary|Western Penitentiary]] in [[Pittsburgh]], Pennsylvania, from 20–22 March 1842;<ref name="Ledger 117">Ledger 117</ref> the decade-long fascination on both sides of the Atlantic with [[spiritualism]];<ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst xiii"/> fairy tales, and nursery stories (which Dickens regarded as stories of conversion and transformation);<ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst xxiv" /> contemporary religious tracts about conversion;<ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst xxiv"/>
When you simplify an overly long sentence, it's fairly easy to locate the break points. Here, we make one sentence three sentences. Doing so also gives you extra room to make things clearer. For example, the writer might want to further emphasize that having so many definitions is a good thing because it enables a more all-encompassing sense of the term.


The works of [[Douglas Jerrold]] in general, but especially "The Beauties of the Police" (1843), a satirical and melodramatic essay about a father and his child forcibly separated in a workhouse, were influences,<ref name="Ledger 117"/> and another satirical essay by Jerrold which may have had a direct influence on Dickens' conception of Scrooge, called "How Mr. Chokepear keeps a merry Christmas" (''[[Punch (magazine)|Punch]]'', 1841).<ref name="Douglas-Fairhurst viii"/>

Egyptian hieroglyphs for the Nile River, literally, "great river"
The preceding revision used the syntax of the original sentence to find break points where new sentences could be started. Another way to think about the process is to take an inventory of the main ideas that a sentence contains. The original sentence above had at least three main ideas. Count the main ideas in this one:

Overly long version: During the 1960s, development thinking, encompassing both ideology and strategy, prioritized economic growth and the application of modern scientific and technical knowledge as the route to prosperity in the underdeveloped world and defined the "global development problem" as one in which less developed nations needed to "catch up" with the West and enter the modern age of capitalism and liberal democracy, in short, to engage in a form of modernization that was equated with westernization (and an associated faith in the rationality of science and technology).

Sentence length: The standard range is considered 14 to 22 words. However, this is an average: plenty of sentences in well-written document go below and above this range.
A new record—86 words! The main ideas include the following:

Prioritization of economic growth (let's ignore the business about ideology and strategy)
Achievement of growth through science and technology
The need for under-developed countries need to "catch up" by imitating Western developed countries
Westernization as also implying capitalism and liberal democracy (There is some repetition about science and technology, although it is associated with some additional ideas about faith and rationality.)
Let's see if we can get these four main ideas into their own separate sentences:

Revision:
1 During the 1960s, development thinking, encompassing both ideology and strategy, prioritized economic growth through the application of modern scientific and technical knowledge.
2 This notion was considered the route to prosperity in the underdeveloped world.
3 The "global development problem" was defined as one in which less developed nations needed to "catch up" with the West and enter the modern age of capitalism and liberal democracy.
4 In short, they needed to engage in a form of modernization that was equated with westernization (and an associated faith in the rationality of science and technology).


Map of the Nile River
This revision cheats a bit but legitimately so. Ideas 1 and 2 end up in a sentence together. Sentence 2 is a new creature we did not define as a main idea. However, it is certainly implied in the original, and it brings out this important idea much better. When you unpack overly long sentences, you will discover that you have more verbal "elbow room" to express ideas more clearly. Notice that this clarification also occurs in the phrase economic growth through the application of modern scientific and technical knowledge. Notice that in the original these ideas were linked by the word and. The word through sets up a sharper clearer relationship between these two things: growth is achieved through science and technology.

You can practice this method in the sentence-diagramming chapter.

Fixing Overly Long Sentences

It would be difficult—and probably impractical—to state a formula or strategy for breaking down overly long sentences. It should be fairly intuitive where to break up long sentences and start new, shorter sentences. It should also help to take an inventory of the main ideas. Get some practice now revising overly long sentences. Cover up the revisions as you go, think through your own revision, and then compare. If you are stumped, read the hints in between the originals and revisions.

Overly long version: In the classical theory of gravity, which is based on real space-time, the universe can either have existed for an infinite time or else it had a beginning at a singularity at some finite time in the past, the latter possibility of which, in fact, the singularity theorems indicate, although the quantum theory of gravity, on the other hand, suggests a third possibility in which it is possible for space-time to be finite in extent and yet to have no singularities that formed a boundary or edge because one is using Euclidean space-times, in which the time direction is on the same footing as directions in space.

Don't worry about the science here. A good technical writer or editor, totally lacking physics background, could whip this 108-word monster into shape and never harm the scientific content. I see two main ideas about the universe based on two possibilities using the classical theory of gravity. A third main idea links singularity theorems with the second possibility. A fourth idea links the quantum theory of gravity with a third possibility. A fifth idea establishes a rationale for the fourth idea. Maybe you can work up five sentence, each one featuring one of these main ideas.

Revision: In the classical theory of gravity, which is based on real space-time, there are only two possible ways the universe can behave. Either it has existed for an infinite time, or else it had a beginning at a singularity at some finite time in the past. In fact, the singularity theorems show it must be the second possibility. In the quantum theory of gravity, on the other hand, a third possibility arises. Because one is using Euclidean space-times, in which the time direction is on the same footing as directions in space, it is possible for space-time to be finite in extent and yet to have no singularities that formed a boundary or edge. —Stephen W. Hawking, The Theory of Everything


The Nile River flowing through the Sahara Desert
Notice in this revision how the word possibility is used to keep us readers focused. You probably haven't a clue—any more than I who avoided physics at all costs—as to what singularity theorems, the quantum theory of gravity, or Euclidean space-times are, but you can see the basic structure of the sentence.

Overly long version: The quantum theory of gravity opens up a new possibility in which there would be no boundary to space–time and, thus, no need to specify the behavior at the boundary because there would be no singularities at which the laws of science broke down and because there would be no edge of space–time at which one would have to appeal to God or create some new law to set the boundary conditions for space-time.

What are the syntactical break points here: in which looks like a strong possibility; thus looks like another; the two instances of because are two more. Thus, maybe you can break this 76-word gem down into 4 sentences. What about main ideas? There's the main idea indicated by new possibility; two more indicated by no boundary and no need; still, two more indicated by the two instances of because. This analysis suggests 5 simpler sentences. Give it a shot.

Revision: The quantum theory of gravity has opened up a new possibility. With this theory, there would be no need for a boundary to space–time. Thus, there would be no need to specify the behavior at the boundary. In other words, the quantum theory of gravity eliminates the need for singularities at which point the laws of science break down and the need for an edge of space–time at which one would have to appeal to God or create some new law to set the boundary conditions for space-time. —Stephen W. Hawking, The Theory of Everything

Notice what gets added in the revision. The word need is repeated like crazy. Sentence 3 more or less restates sentence 2, but echoing the all-important need. It can'y be repeated enough: this kind of repetition is good—it helps readers follow the discussion.

Overly long version: The explanation that is usually given as to why we don’t see broken cups jumping back onto the table is that it is forbidden by the second law of thermodynamics, which states that disorder or entropy always increases with time, such that an intact cup on the table is a state of high order, but a broken cup on the floor is a disordered state, a fact that indicates that one can therefore go from the whole cup on the table in the past to the broken cup on the floor in the future, but not the other way around.

Need some hints? Looks like which states is a break point as well such that and a fact that.

Revision: The explanation that is usually given as to why we don’t see broken cups jumping back onto the table is that it is forbidden by the second law of thermodynamics. This [law] says that disorder or entropy always increases with time. An intact cup on the table is a state of high order, but a broken cup on the floor is a disordered state. One can therefore go from the whole cup on the table in the past to the broken cup on the floor in the future, but not the other way around. —Stephen W. Hawking, The Theory of Everything

Overly long version: Suppose a systems starts out in one of the small number of ordered states, then as time goes by, the system evolves according to the laws of physics and its state changes, then at a later time, there is a high probability that it will be in a more disordered state, simply because there are so many more disordered states——the implication of which is that disorder will tend to increase with time if the system obeys an initial condition of high order.


Dhows on the Nile River
How many ideas? Maybe six or seven: the starting state, the next state, a following state, increasing disorder with time, increasing number of disordered states, the reason for that disorder. How many syntactical segments? Probably five, with break points at then, then at a later time, simply because, and the implication.

Revision: Suppose a systems starts out in one


==Plot==
==Plot==

Revision as of 05:35, 18 December 2014

A Christmas Carol
First edition frontispiece and title page (1843)
AuthorCharles Dickens
Original titleA Christmas Carol. In Prose. Being a Ghost Story of Christmas.
IllustratorJohn Leech
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovella
Parable
Social criticism
Ghost story
Morality tale
Published19 December 1843 (Chapman & Hall)
Publication placeEngland
Media typePrint

A Christmas Carol is a novella by Charles Dickens. It was first published in London by Chapman & Hall on 19 December 1843.[1][2] The novella met with instant success and critical acclaim. Carol tells the story of a bitter old miser named Ebenezer Scrooge and his transformation into a gentler, kindlier man after visitations by the ghost of his former business partner Jacob Marley and the Ghosts of Christmases Past, Present and Yet to Come.

The book was written at a time when the British were examining and exploring Christmas traditions from the past as well as new customs such as Christmas cards and Christmas trees. Carol singing took a new lease on life during this time.[3] Dickens' sources for the tale appear to be many and varied, but are, principally, the humiliating experiences of his childhood, his sympathy for the poor, and various Christmas stories and fairy tales.[4][5][6]

Dickens' Carol was one of the greatest influences in rejuvenating the old Christmas traditions of England, but, while it brings to the reader images of light, joy, warmth and life, it also brings strong and unforgettable images of darkness, despair, coldness, sadness, and death.[3] Scrooge himself is the embodiment of winter, and, just as winter is followed by spring and the renewal of life, so too is Scrooge's cold, pinched heart restored to the innocent goodwill he had known in his childhood and youth.[7][8]A Christmas Carol remains popular—having never been out of print[6]—and has been adapted many times to film, stage, opera, and other media.

Background

Dickens was not the first author to celebrate the Christmas season in literature,[4] but it was he who superimposed his humanitarian vision of the holiday upon the public, an idea that has been termed as Dickens' "Carol Philosophy".[9] Dickens believed the best way to reach the broadest segment of the population regarding his concerns about poverty and social injustice was to write a deeply-felt Christmas story rather than polemical pamphlets and essays.[10][11] Dickens' career as a bestselling author was on the wane, and the writer felt he needed to produce a tale that would prove both profitable and popular. Dickens' visit to the work-worn industrial city of Manchester was the "spark" that fired the author to produce a story about the poor, a repentant miser, and redemption that would become A Christmas Carol.[12]

The forces that inspired Dickens to create a powerful, impressive and enduring tale were the profoundly humiliating experiences of his childhood, the plight of the poor and their children during the boom decades of the 1830s and 1840s, Washington Irving's essays on Christmas published in his Sketch Book (1820) describing the traditional old English Christmas,[13] fairy tales and nursery stories, as well as satirical essays and religious tracts.[4][5][6]

Childhood experiences

Artist's impression of Charles Dickens at the blacking warehouse, 1904

While Dickens' humiliating childhood experiences are not directly described in A Christmas Carol, his conflicting feelings for his father as a result of those experiences are principally responsible for the dual personality of the tale's protagonist, Ebenezer Scrooge. In 1824, Dickens' father, John, was imprisoned in the Marshalsea whilst 12-year-old Charles was forced to take lodgings nearby, pawn his collection of books, leave school and accept employment in a blacking factory.

The boy had a deep sense of class and intellectual superiority and was entirely uncomfortable in the presence of factory workers who referred to him as "the young gentleman"; as a result of this, he developed nervous fits. When his father was released at the end of a three-month stint, young Dickens was forced to continue working in the factory, which only grieved and humiliated him further. He despaired of ever recovering his former happy life.

The devastating impact of the period wounded him psychologically, coloured his work, and haunted his entire life with disturbing memories. Dickens both loved and demonized his father, and it was this psychological conflict that was responsible for the two radically different Scrooges in the tale—one Scrooge, a cold, stingy and greedy semi-recluse, and the other Scrooge, a benevolent, sociable man, whose generosity and goodwill toward all men earn for him a near-saintly reputation.[14] It was during this terrible period in Dickens' childhood that he observed the lives of the men, women, and children in the most impoverished areas of London and witnessed the social injustices they suffered.[4][15]

Children living in poverty

Charles Dickens in 1842, the year before the publication of A Christmas Carol

Dickens was keenly touched by the lot of poor children in the middle decades of the 19th century.[16] In early 1843, he toured the Cornish tin mines, where he saw children working in appalling conditions. The suffering he witnessed there was reinforced by a visit to the Field Lane Ragged School, one of several London schools set up for the education of the capital's half-starved, illiterate street children.[17]

Inspired by the February 1843 parliamentary report exposing the effects of the Industrial Revolution upon poor children called Second Report of the Children's Employment Commission, Dickens planned in May 1843 to publish an inexpensive political pamphlet tentatively titled, "An Appeal to the People of England, on behalf of the Poor Man's Child", but changed his mind, deferring the pamphlet's production until the end of the year.[18] He wrote to Dr. Southwood Smith, one of 84 commissioners responsible for the Second Report, about his change in plans: "[Y]ou will certainly feel that a Sledge hammer has come down with twenty times the force—twenty thousand times the force—I could exert by following out my first idea". The pamphlet would become A Christmas Carol.[19]

In a fundraising speech on 5 October 1843, at the Manchester Athenæum, Dickens urged workers and employers to join together to combat ignorance with educational reform,[10][20] and realised in the days following that the most effective way to reach the broadest segment of the population with his social concerns about poverty and injustice was to write a deeply felt Christmas narrative rather than polemical pamphlets and essays.[10][11] It was during his three days in Manchester that he conceived the plot of A Christmas Carol.[10][21]

Washington Irving's Christmas stories

Washington Irving in 1820

Irving's The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. (1819–1820) was written over 20 years before A Christmas Carol. The Sketch Book depicted the harmonious warmhearted English Christmas traditions that Irving had experienced while staying at Aston Hall. The tales and essays attracted Dickens,[4] and the two authors shared the belief that the staging of a nostalgic English Christmas might restore a social harmony and well-being lost in the modern world.[22] In "A Christmas Dinner" from Sketches by Boz (1833), Dickens had approached the holiday in a manner similar to Irving, and, in The Pickwick Papers (1837), he offered an idealised vision of Christmas at Dingley Dell.[22] In the Pickwick episode, a Mr. Wardle relates the tale of Gabriel Grub, a lonely and mean-spirited sexton, who undergoes a Christmas conversion after being visited by goblins who show him the past and future – the prototype of A Christmas Carol.[23][24]

Other influences

Douglas William Jerrold by Sir Daniel MacNee, 1853

Other likely influences were a visit Dickens made to the Western Penitentiary in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, from 20–22 March 1842;[25] the decade-long fascination on both sides of the Atlantic with spiritualism;[15] fairy tales, and nursery stories (which Dickens regarded as stories of conversion and transformation);[5] contemporary religious tracts about conversion;[5]

The works of Douglas Jerrold in general, but especially "The Beauties of the Police" (1843), a satirical and melodramatic essay about a father and his child forcibly separated in a workhouse, were influences,[25] and another satirical essay by Jerrold which may have had a direct influence on Dickens' conception of Scrooge, called "How Mr. Chokepear keeps a merry Christmas" (Punch, 1841).[6]

Plot

Dickens divides the book into five chapters, which he labels "staves", that is, song stanzas or verses, in keeping with the title of the book.

Stave One

"Marley's Ghost", original illustration by John Leech from A Christmas Carol

The tale begins on a "cold, bleak, biting" Christmas Eve exactly seven years after the death of Scrooge's business partner Jacob Marley. Scrooge, an old miser, is established within the first stave as "a squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous, old sinner!" He hates Christmas, calling it "humbug"; he refuses his nephew Fred's Christmas dinner invitation, and rudely turns away two gentlemen who seek a donation from him to provide a Christmas dinner for the poor. His only "Christmas gift" is allowing his overworked, underpaid clerk Bob Cratchit Christmas Day off with pay – which he does only to keep with social custom, Scrooge considering it "a poor excuse for picking a man's pocket every 25th of December!"

At home that night, Scrooge is visited by Marley's ghost, who is forever cursed to wander the earth dragging a network of heavy chains, forged during a lifetime of greed and selfishness. Dickens describes the apparition thus: "Marley's face ... had a dismal light about it, like a bad lobster in a dark cellar." Marley has a bandage under his chin, tied at the top of his head; "... how much greater was his horror, when the phantom taking off the bandage round its head, as if it were too warm to wear indoors, its lower jaw dropped down upon its breast!"

Marley tells Scrooge that he will be visited by three spirits that night, and that he must listen to them or be cursed to carry chains of his own that are much longer than Marley's chains. As Marley departs, Scrooge witnesses other restless spirits who now wish they could help their fellow man, but are powerless to do so. Scrooge is then visited by the three spirits Marley spoke of – each visit detailed in a separate stave – who accompany him on visits to various Christmas scenes.

Stave Two

The first of the spirits, the Ghost of Christmas Past, takes Scrooge to Christmas scenes of Scrooge's boyhood and youth, which stir the old miser's gentle and tender side by reminding him of a time when he was kinder and more innocent. These scenes portray Scrooge's lonely childhood, his relationship with his beloved sister Fan, and a Christmas party hosted by his first employer, Mr. Fezziwig, who treated Scrooge like a son. They also portray Scrooge's neglected fiancée, Belle, who ends their relationship after she realizes that Scrooge will never love her as much as he loves money, and a visit later in time to the then-married Belle's large and happy family on Christmas Eve.

Stave Three

The second spirit, the Ghost of Christmas Present, takes Scrooge to several different scenes – a joy-filled market of people buying the makings of Christmas dinner, celebrations of Christmas in a miner's cottage and in a lighthouse. Scrooge and the spirit also visit Fred's Christmas party, where Fred speaks of his uncle with pity. A major part of this stave is taken up with Bob Cratchit's family feast, and introduces his youngest son, Tiny Tim, who is full of simple happiness despite being seriously ill. The spirit informs Scrooge that Tiny Tim will soon die unless the course of events changes. Before disappearing, the spirit shows Scrooge two hideous, emaciated children named Ignorance and Want. He tells Scrooge to beware the former above all, and replies to Scrooge's concern for their welfare by repeating Scrooge's own words: "Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?"

Stave Four

Scrooge and Bob Cratchit celebrate Christmas in an illustration from Stave Five of the original edition, 1843.

The third spirit, the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come, shows Scrooge Christmas Day one year later. Tiny Tim has died because Cratchit could not afford to provide the boy with proper care on his meager salary. The spirit then shows Scrooge scenes involving the death of a "wretched man". The man's funeral will only be attended by local businessmen if lunch is provided. His charwoman, his laundress, and the local undertaker steal some of his possessions while his corpse still lays in the bed and sell them to a fence named Old Joe for money. The Charwoman gives Old Joe the bed curtains, the Laundress gives Old Joe the bed sheets, and the undertaker gives Old Joe some button collars. The spirit then shows Scrooge the man's neglected grave: the tombstone bears Scrooge's name. Sobbing, Scrooge pledges that he will change his ways in hopes that he may "sponge the writing from this stone".

Stave Five

Scrooge awakens on Christmas morning with joy and love in his heart. He spends the day with Fred's family and anonymously sends a prize turkey[26] to the Cratchit home for Christmas dinner. The following day, he gives Cratchit a raise and becomes like "a second father" to Tiny Tim. A changed man, Scrooge now treats everyone with kindness, generosity, and compassion; he now embodies the spirit of Christmas. As the final narration states, "Many laughed to see this alteration in him, but he let them laugh and little heeded them, for he knew that no good thing in this world ever happened, at which some did not have their fill of laughter. His own heart laughed and that was quite enough for him. And it was always said of him that he knew how to keep Christmas well if any man alive possessed the knowledge." The story closes with the narrator repeating Tiny Tim's famous words: "God bless us, everyone!"

Publication

First edition cover

Dickens began to write A Christmas Carol in September 1843.[27] The book was completed in six weeks, with the final pages written in early December.[28] The book was published on 19 December 1843.[1][2] As the result of a feud with his publisher over the slim earnings on his previous novel, Martin Chuzzlewit,[29] Dickens declined a lump-sum payment for the tale, chose a percentage of the profits in hopes of making more money thereby, and published the work at his own expense.[28] High production costs however brought him only £230 (equal to £29,000 today) rather than the £1,000 (equal to £124,000 today) he expected and needed, as his wife was once again pregnant.[29][30] A year later, the profits were only £744, and Dickens was deeply disappointed.[29]

Production of the book was not without problems. The first printing contained drab olive endpapers that Dickens felt were unacceptable, and the publisher Chapman and Hall quickly replaced them with yellow endpapers, but, once replaced, those clashed with the title page, which was then redone.[18][31] The final product was bound in red cloth with gilt-edged pages,[27][28] completed only two days before the release date of 19 December 1843.[32][33]

John Leech illustrated the first edition of A Christmas Carol.

Following publication, Dickens arranged for the manuscript to be bound in red Morocco leather and presented as a gift to his solicitor, Thomas Mitton. In 1875, Mitton sold the manuscript to bookseller Francis Harvey reportedly for £50 (equal to £5,900 today), who sold it to autograph collector, Henry George Churchill, in 1882, who, in turn, sold the manuscript to Bennett, a Birmingham bookseller. Bennett sold it for £200 to Robson and Kerslake of London, which sold it to Dickens collector Stuart M. Samuel for £300. Finally, it was purchased by J. Pierpont Morgan for an undisclosed sum. It is now held by the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York.[34][35] Four expensive, hand-coloured etchings and four black and white wood engravings by John Leech accompanied the text.[28]

Priced at five shillings (equal to £31 today),[28] the first run of 6,000 copies sold out by Christmas Eve and the book continued to sell well into the new year.[18][36] By May 1844, a seventh edition had sold out.[16] In all, 24 editions ran in its original form.[37] In spite of the disappointing profits for the author, the book was a huge artistic success, with most critics responding positively.[36]

Critical reception

The book received immediate critical acclaim. The London literary magazine, Athenaeum, declared it: "A tale to make the reader laugh and cry – to open his hands, and open his heart to charity even toward the uncharitable ... a dainty dish to set before a King."[38] Poet and editor Thomas Hood wrote, "If Christmas, with its ancient and hospitable customs, its social and charitable observances, were ever in danger of decay, this is the book that would give them a new lease. The very name of the author predisposes one to the kindlier feelings; and a peep at the Frontispiece sets the animal spirits capering".[38]

Thackeray in 1844. He wrote that year that Carol was "a national benefit and to every man or woman who reads it, a personal kindness."

William Makepeace Thackeray in Fraser's Magazine (February 1844) pronounced the book, "a national benefit and to every man or woman who reads it, a personal kindness. The last two people I heard speak of it were women; neither knew the other, or the author, and both said, by way of criticism, 'God bless him!'" Thackeray wrote about Tiny Tim, "There is not a reader in England but that little creature will be a bond of union between the author and him; and he will say of Charles Dickens, as the woman just now, 'GOD BLESS HIM!' What a feeling this is for a writer to inspire, and what a reward to reap!".[38]

Even the caustic critic Theodore Martin (who was usually virulently hostile to Dickens) spoke well of the book, noting it was "finely felt and calculated to work much social good".[39] A few critics registered their complaints. The New Monthly Magazine, for example, thought the book's physical magnificence kept it from being available to the poor and recommended the tale be printed on cheap paper and priced accordingly. The religious press generally ignored the tale but, in January 1884, Christian Remembrancer thought the tale's old and hackneyed subject was treated in an original way and praised the author's sense of humour and pathos.[40] Dickens later noted that he received "by every post, all manner of strangers writing all manner of letters about their homes and hearths, and how the Carol is read aloud there, and kept on a very little shelf by itself".[41] After Dickens' death, Margaret Oliphant deplored the turkey and plum pudding aspects of the book but admitted that in the days of its first publication it was regarded as "a new gospel" and noted that the book was unique in that it actually made people behave better.[39]

Margaret Oliphant (1881) wrote that the book was regarded as "a new gospel" in its first days.

Americans were less enthusiastic at first. Dickens had wounded their national pride with American Notes for General Circulation and Martin Chuzzlewit, but Carol was too compelling to be dismissed, and, by the end of the American Civil War, copies of the book were in wide circulation.[42] The New York Times published an enthusiastic review in 1863, noting that the author brought the "old Christmas ... of bygone centuries and remote manor houses, into the living rooms of the poor of today", while the North American Review believed Dickens's "fellow feeling with the race is his genius"; and John Greenleaf Whittier thought the book charming, "inwardly and outwardly".[43]

For Americans, Scrooge's redemption may have recalled that of the United States as it recovered from war,[44] and the curmudgeon's charitable generosity to the poor in the final pages viewed as a reflection of a similar generosity practised by Americans as they sought solutions to poverty.[45] The book's issues are detectable from a slightly different perspective in Frank Capra's It's a Wonderful Life (1946), and Scrooge is likely an influence upon Dr. Seuss's How the Grinch Stole Christmas! (1957).[46]

Impact

Ignorance and Want from the original edition, 1843

Parley's Illuminated Library pirated the tale in January 1844,[23] and, though Dickens sued and won his case, the literary pirates simply declared bankruptcy. Dickens was left to pay £700 in costs, equal to £88,000 today.[23][47] The entanglements of the various suits Dickens brought against the publishers, his resulting financial losses, and the slim profits from the sale of Carol greatly disappointed Dickens. He felt a special affection for the book's moral lesson and its message of love and generosity. In his tale of a man who is given a second chance to live a good life, he was demonstrating to his readers that they, too, could achieve a similar salvation in a selfish world that had blunted their generosity and compassion.[23]

The novella was adapted for the stage almost immediately. Three productions opened on 5 February 1844, with one by Edward Stirling sanctioned by Dickens and running for more than 40 nights.[48] By the close of February 1844, eight rival Carol theatrical productions were playing in London.[36] Stirling's version played New York City's Park Theatre during the Christmas season of 1844 and was revived in London the same year.[49] Hundreds of newsboys gathered for a musical version of the tale at the Chatham Theatre in New York City in 1844, but brawling broke out and was quelled only when offenders were led off by police to the Tombs. Even after order had been restored in the theatre, the clamorous cries of one youngster drowned out the bass drum that ushered Marley onto the stage as he rose through a trap door.[50]

First film adaptation, 1901

Other media adaptations include films, a radio play, and a television version. In all there are at least 28 film versions of the tale. The earliest surviving one is Scrooge; or Marley's Ghost (1901), a silent British version.[51] Six more silent versions followed, with one made by Thomas Edison in 1910. The first sound version was made in Britain in 1928. Albert Finney won a Golden Globe as Scrooge in a 1970 musical film, and the 1951 version starring Alastair Sim has won critical praise, along with other adaptations featuring Seymour Hicks in 1935 and George C. Scott in 1984.[52] Other media adaptations include a popular radio play version in 1934, starring Lionel Barrymore, an American television version from the 1940s, and, in 1949, the first commercial sound recording with Ronald Colman.[53]

In the years following the book's publication, responses to the tale were published by W. M. Swepstone (Christmas Shadows, 1850), Horatio Alger (Job Warner's Christmas, 1863), Louisa May Alcott (A Christmas Dream, and How It Came True, 1882), and others who followed Scrooge's life as a reformed man – or some who thought Dickens had gotten it wrong and needed to be corrected.[54]

Frontispiece and title page of Dickens' The Cricket on the Hearth, 1846

Dickens himself returned to the tale time and again during his life to tweak the phrasing and punctuation,[54] and capitalized on the success of the book by annually publishing other Christmas stories in 1844, 1845, 1846, and 1848.[55] The Chimes, The Cricket on the Hearth, The Battle of Life and The Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain were all based on the pattern laid down in Carol – a secular conversion tale laced with social injustice.[55] While the public eagerly bought the later books, the critics bludgeoned them.[55] Dickens himself questioned The Battle of Life's worth.[56] Dickens liked its title, though, and once considered using it for another novel which instead became A Tale of Two Cities.[57]

By 1849, Dickens was engaged with David Copperfield and had neither the time nor the inclination to produce another Christmas book.[58] Disappointed with those that followed Carol, he decided the best way to reach his audience with his "Carol philosophy" was via public readings.[59] In 1853, Carol was the text chosen for his first public reading with the performance an immense success.[19] Thereafter, he read the tale in an abbreviated version 127 times,[59] until 1870 (the year of his death), when it provided the material for his farewell performance.[19][59]

Themes

"The Ghost of Christmas Present" from the original edition, 1843

Dickens wrote in the wake of British government changes to the benefits system known as the Poor Laws, changes that required, among other things, benefits applicants to work on treadmills. Dickens asks, in effect, for people to recognise the plight of those whom the Industrial Revolution has displaced and driven into poverty, and the obligation of society to provide for them humanely. Failure to do so, the writer implies through the personification of Ignorance and Want as ghastly children, will result in an unnamed "Doom" for those who, like Scrooge, believe their wealth and status qualifies them to sit in judgement over the poor rather than to assist them.[60]

Stephen Skelton states that Christian themes are woven throughout the book, with Dickens himself stating that "I have always striven in my writings to express the veneration for the life and lessons of our Saviour." The title of the book has the word "carol" in it, which in Dickens' time, was defined as "a song celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ" and for this reason, Dickens calls the chapters of the book "staves, which means the stanzas of a song." Dickens' statement that Jacob Marley "had no bowels" is a reference to the "bowels of compassion" mentioned in I John, the reason for his eternal damnation. The themes of "sinfulness to regret to repentance to salvation" are also featured throughout the novel.[61] It is for this reason that the novel is regarded by some readers "as a Christian allegory of redemption."[62]

Some critics like Restad have suggested that Scrooge's redemption underscores what they see as the conservative, individualistic and patriarchal aspects of Dickens' 'Carol philosophy', which propounded the idea of a more fortunate individual willingly looking after a less fortunate one. Personal moral conscience and individual action led in effect to a form of noblesse oblige, which was expected of those individuals of means.[45]

Legacy

While the phrase "Merry Christmas" was popularized following the appearance of the story,[63] and the name "Scrooge" and exclamation "Bah! Humbug!" have entered the English language,[64] Ruth Glancy argues the book's singular achievement is the powerful influence it has exerted upon its readers. In the spring of 1844, The Gentleman's Magazine attributed a sudden burst of charitable giving in Britain to Dickens' novella; in 1874, Robert Louis Stevenson waxed enthusiastic after reading Dickens' Christmas books and vowed to give generously; and Thomas Carlyle expressed a generous hospitality by staging two Christmas dinners after reading the book.[65] In America, a Mr. Fairbanks attended a reading on Christmas Eve in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1867, and was so moved he closed his factory on Christmas Day and sent every employee a turkey.[36] In the early years of the 20th century, the Queen of Norway sent gifts to London's crippled children signed "With Tiny Tim's Love"; Squire Bancroft raised £20,000 for the poor by reading the tale aloud publicly; and Captain Corbett-Smith read the tale to the troops in the trenches of World War I.[66]

According to historian Ronald Hutton, the current state of observance of Christmas is largely the result of a mid-Victorian revival of the holiday spearheaded by A Christmas Carol. Hutton writes that Dickens "linked worship and feasting, within a context of social reconciliation".[67] In advocating a humanitarian focus of the holiday,[9] Dickens influenced many aspects of Christmas that are celebrated today in Western culture, such as family gatherings, seasonal food and drink, dancing, games and a festive generosity of spirit.[68] With the appearance of the Oxford Movement and the growth of Anglo-Catholicism, a revival in the traditional rituals and religious observances associated with Christmastide also occurred.[69]

This simple morality tale with its pathos and theme of redemption significantly redefined the "spirit" and importance of Christmas, since, as Margaret Oliphant recalled, it "moved us all those days ago as if it had been a new gospel."[70] The tale resurrected a form of seasonal merriment that had been suppressed by the Puritan quelling of Yuletide pageantry in 17th-century England.[71]

Adaptations

The story has been adapted to other media including film, opera, ballet, a Broadway musical, animation, and a BBC mime production starring Marcel Marceau.[6]

References

Footnotes
  1. ^ a b "The Dickens Project". University of California, Santa Cruz. Retrieved 25 December 2013. Cite error: The named reference "Dickens Chronology" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b Tomalin, Claire (2011). Charles Dickens: A Life. Viking Press. p. 149. ISBN 978-0-670-91767-9. Cite error: The named reference "Claire Tomalin" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  3. ^ a b Kelly 10
  4. ^ a b c d e Kelly 12
  5. ^ a b c d Douglas-Fairhurst xxiv
  6. ^ a b c d e Douglas-Fairhurst viii
  7. ^ Kelly 11
  8. ^ Hearn xiv
  9. ^ a b Forbes, Bruce David (1 October 2008). Christmas: A Candid History. --University of California Press]]. p. 62. ISBN 9780520258020. What Dickens did advocate in his story was "the spirit of Christmas." Sociologist James Barnett has described it as Dickens's "Carol Philosophy," which "combined religious and secular attitudes toward to celebration into a humanitarian pattern. It excoriated individual selfishness and extolled the virtues of brotherhood, kindness, and generosity at Christmas. . . .Dickens preached that at Christmas men should forget self and think of others, especially the poor and the unfortunate." The message was one that both religious and secular people could endorse. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  10. ^ a b c d Kelly 15
  11. ^ a b Douglas-Fairhurst xvi
  12. ^ A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
  13. ^ Washington Irving, "Old Christmas"
  14. ^ Kelly 14
  15. ^ a b Douglas-Fairhurst xiii
  16. ^ a b Andrews, Dale (20 December 2011). "Dickens' A Christmas Carol". Literary History. Washington: SleuthSayers.
  17. ^ Hearn xxxii
  18. ^ a b c Glancy x
  19. ^ a b c Ledger 119
  20. ^ Hearn xxxiii
  21. ^ Hearn xxxiv
  22. ^ a b Restad 137
  23. ^ a b c d Kelly 19
  24. ^ Slater xvi
  25. ^ a b Ledger 117
  26. ^ lisala (20 December 2010). "Dickens' A Christmas Carol and the Question of Turkey or Goose". Real Book. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
  27. ^ a b Slater 43
  28. ^ a b c d e Douglas-Fairhurst xix
  29. ^ a b c Kelly 17
  30. ^ Douglas-Fairhurst xx,xvii
  31. ^ Douglas-Fairhurst xxxi
  32. ^ Varese, Jon Michael (22 December 2009). "Why A Christmas Carol was a flop for Dickens". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 December 2011.
  33. ^ Jaques, Edward Tyrrell (1914). Charles Dickens in chancery: being an account of his proceedings in respect of the "Christmas carol". Longmans, Green and Co. p. 5. Retrieved 16 December 2011.
  34. ^ Douglas-Fairhurst xxx
  35. ^ Hearn cv,cvi
  36. ^ a b c d Douglas-Fairhurst xx
  37. ^ Glancy 17
  38. ^ a b c Kelly 18
  39. ^ a b Glancy xii
  40. ^ Hearn lvii
  41. ^ Glancy xi
  42. ^ Restad 136
  43. ^ Restad 136–7
  44. ^ Restad 138
  45. ^ a b Restad 139
  46. ^ Restad 166,169
  47. ^ Slater 44
  48. ^ Standiford 168
  49. ^ Standiford 169
  50. ^ Nissenbaum 124
  51. ^ [1]
  52. ^ Kelly 28
  53. ^ Standiford 171–3
  54. ^ a b Douglas-Fairhurst xxi
  55. ^ a b c Douglas-Fairhurst xxii
  56. ^ Douglas-Fairhurst xxiii
  57. ^ Douglas-Fairhurst xxvi
  58. ^ Douglas-Fairhurst xxvii
  59. ^ a b c Douglas-Fairhurst xxviii
  60. ^ Slater 1971 xiv
  61. ^ Skelton, Stephen. "Reclaiming 'A Christmas Carol'". CBN. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
  62. ^ Moore, Grace (2011). Text Guide on Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol. Insight Publications. p. 57. ISBN 1-921411-91-0.
  63. ^ Cochrane 126
  64. ^ Standiford 183
  65. ^ Glancy xii–xiii
  66. ^ Glancy xiii
  67. ^ Hutton, Ronald (15 February 2001). Stations of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in Britain. Oxford University Press. p. 113. ISBN 9780191578427. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  68. ^ Kelly 9,12
  69. ^ Ronald Hutton Stations of the Sun: The Ritual Year in England. 1996. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 113. ISBN 0-19-285448-8.
  70. ^ Callow, 39
  71. ^ Kelly, 9–10
Works cited
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  • Cochrane, Robertson (1996), Wordplay: origins, meanings, and usage of the English language, University of Toronto Press, p. 126, ISBN 0-8020-7752-8
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  • Dickens, Charles; Glancy, Ruth (1998) [1988], Christmas Books, Oxford World Classics, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-283435-5
  • Dickens, Charles; Hearn, Michael Patrick (ed.) (2004), The Annotated Christmas Carol, W. W. Norton and Co., ISBN 0-393-05158-7 {{citation}}: |author2= has generic name (help)
  • Dickens, Charles; Kelly, Richard Michael (ed.) (2003), A Christmas Carol, Broadview Literary Texts, New York: Broadview Press {{citation}}: |author2= has generic name (help)
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  • Glancy, Ruth F. (1985), Dickens' Christmas Books, Christmas Stories, and Other Short Fiction, Michigan: Garland, ISBN 0-8240-8988-X
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  • Ledger, Sally (2007), Dickens and the Popular Radical Imagination, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-84577-9
  • Nissenbaum, Stephen (1996), The Battle for Christmas, New York: Vintage Books (Random House), ISBN 0-679-74038-4
  • Rowell, Geoffrey (December 1993), Dickens and the Construction of Christmas, History Today, 43:12 {{citation}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  • Restad, Penne L. (1995), Christmas in America: a History, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-510980-5
  • Slater, Michael (2007), Charles Dickens, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-921352-8
  • Standiford, Les (2008), The Man Who Invented Christmas: How Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol Rescued His Career and Revived Our Holiday Spirits, New York: Crown, ISBN 978-0-307-40578-4