A Christmas Carol | Summary
Stave I: Marley's Ghost
As A Christmas Carol opens, readers are introduced to Ebenezer Scrooge, the epitome of a tight-fisted miser: he is too cheap to heat his office, too cheap to give his clerk Christmas Day off without demanding he come in early the next day, and too cheap to care about the suffering of the poor people all around him. The tale begins on Christmas Eve, and Scrooge is visited by his nephew Fred, a good-natured man who tries to celebrate the holiday with his uncle, but is rebuked:
"If I could work my...
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- A Christmas Carol: Introduction
- A Christmas Carol: Summary
- A Christmas Carol: Charles Dickens Biography
- A Christmas Carol: Characters
- A Christmas Carol: Themes
- A Christmas Carol: Style
- A Christmas Carol: Historical Context
- A Christmas Carol: Critical Overview
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A Christmas Carol: Essays and Criticism
- The Popularity of A Christmas Carol: Excessive Sentimentalism or Powerful Storytelling?
- Stalking the Figurative Oyster: The Excursive Ideal in A Christmas Carol
- The Conversion of Scrooge: A Defense of That Good Man's Motivation
- The Christmas Carol and the Economic Man
- Some Candid Opinions on A Christmas Carol
- A Christmas Carol: Compare and Contrast
- A Christmas Carol: Topics for Further Study
- A Christmas Carol: Media Adaptations
- A Christmas Carol: What Do I Read Next?
- A Christmas Carol: Bibliography and Further Reading
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