The origins of A Christmas Carol

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  • Опубликовано: 31 дек 2024

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  • @AndrewEllisAndymanout
    @AndrewEllisAndymanout 5 лет назад +155

    Once a drunkard and today over a decade sober, I find the Christmas Carol a strikingly poinient tale of redemption. I intentionally resist watching it except at the end of June and repeatedly between Thanksgiving and Christmas. It is a singular work. I am grateful for it.
    God bless and may you have a love filled Christmas.

    • @marwood1969
      @marwood1969 3 года назад

      @@trejea1754 Yes, yes, we know. A trifle pedantic if you don't mind me saying. The comment was heartfelt and almost poetic.

    • @sartainja
      @sartainja Год назад +4

      G-d bless you Andrew. Stay strong and focused.

    • @sartainja
      @sartainja Год назад +4

      Once had a manager who was a modern day, Scrooge. He made us go out and do federal tax enforcement actions on Christmas Eve at 4:00 PM. He was so stingy that he hoarded office supplies from us. He gave me a legal pad that was so old that paper mites had eaten holes in the sheets and your pen keep dropping into the hole. Just had to purchase my own supplies.

    • @notyou9743
      @notyou9743 Год назад +2

      @@sartainjamay he (stingy boss) be happy in the miserable life he has chosen.

    • @sartainja
      @sartainja Год назад

      @@notyou9743 After he was not my manager, I would walk by his office singing a version of Frosty ☃️ the Snowman that I had rewritten for his cheap-skating self. He retired after 35 years. Developed a brain tumor after 9 months. Then, died 14 months later. What I did on his grave would not pass for flowers.

  • @dawnadriennetaylor970
    @dawnadriennetaylor970 17 дней назад +9

    What an absolutely wonderful video to find! Professor Michael Slater was my beloved and esteemed English master at Birkbeck. I shared with him that my Father was encouraged by his librarian, having already read Mrs Craik's "John Halifax, Gentleman" three times by age 6, to try Dickens. He never looked back and I still have that same volume, amongst others. My Father painted a card with Dickensian characters and quotes for me to present to Professor Slater at his leaving party. I received a wonderful letter of thanks from him.

  • @marwood1969
    @marwood1969 3 года назад +55

    My dear Grandfather would read this every Christmas and now I do the same. We all know it so well, that it's easy to overlook just how brilliant it is. It's a beautiful story and strikes at my heart every time I read it.

  • @wishgodgirl1903
    @wishgodgirl1903 2 года назад +37

    Best Christmas story ever. I watch as many versions as I can around the holidays. People don’t realize how many movies were made of this wonderful tale…

    • @hurdygurdyguy1
      @hurdygurdyguy1 10 дней назад +1

      My favorite is "Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol" ... has been since I watched it on TV as a kid in the '60's!

    • @coffeebean7117
      @coffeebean7117 8 дней назад +1

      I agree. It is the best Christmas story. I also have watched and continue to watch every version of the story I can find. It is funny how each version has its own differences to the original story

  • @vintagebrew1057
    @vintagebrew1057 3 года назад +54

    Mr Dickens was involved with many charitable endeavors here in the East End of London. He really was a wonderful person and great author!

    • @SorshaLenning
      @SorshaLenning 5 дней назад +1

      Wonderful? I heard that he wasn't such a great person when it came to his later years. 🙄

    • @vintagebrew1057
      @vintagebrew1057 4 дня назад +1

      @SorshaLenning I'm talking about his influence on how the poor were seen and treated, not his complicated private life. Everyone has two sides to them. Some are probabley quite nice but pompous....

  • @trojanette8345
    @trojanette8345 4 года назад +31

    Best discussion, history and analysis of this story I have ever seen. Thank You British Library.

  • @swagotoroy652
    @swagotoroy652 3 года назад +23

    One of the greatest books of Dickens - shows how we all can change for the better.

    • @donufro
      @donufro 21 день назад

      I don't even see Scrooge as a bad man. Inside he was a sad, scarred, frightened man. So it's not that he was somehow changed; he was shown the reality of others' pain, and relieved of his own.

  • @jemj.65
    @jemj.65 5 лет назад +53

    This person speaks in such a magical way ✨❤️

  • @kennethlapointesongwriter3330
    @kennethlapointesongwriter3330 14 дней назад +2

    One of those great creations that has a never-ending impact on the human experience, human existence. To me the biggest impact of it is what I call the Transformation...where the most pitiable, wretched, noxious example of a person CAN AND DOES completely change to a wonderful, kind, generous, helping soul. People sometimes have to be led by the hand to see something, to be shown something, and as long as it's believable, they too get the idea they can change for the better, and in fact immensely. Thanks you Mr. Dickens!

  • @anitarichmond8930
    @anitarichmond8930 6 лет назад +35

    A Christmas Carol is an inspired piece of literature. A Masterwork, which no Library is complete without no less than a cautionary tale reminding the reader to have a care for what you do is as indelible as a name on a tombstone. Wishing you and yours The Season's best and may all God bless 🎄

  • @gusthegrinch7390
    @gusthegrinch7390 Месяц назад +6

    Every year I read and or listen to an audiobook of A Christmas Carol. It never ceases to make me cry. There is always hope that mankind can change, that I can change, but then we all go to the polls and prove that we are Scrooge unredeemed.

  • @alexandrucazacu6800
    @alexandrucazacu6800 5 лет назад +75

    Am i the only one who uses this for Homework?

    • @sahira04
      @sahira04 5 лет назад +1

      Alexandru Cazacu no i am too

    • @narsfy58
      @narsfy58 4 года назад

      @@sadyakhan5152 I am too

    • @conlon4332
      @conlon4332 3 года назад +1

      My teacher had us watch it in class.

    • @OmamoghoPeter
      @OmamoghoPeter 24 дня назад

      No I have

  • @goodlife6145
    @goodlife6145 3 года назад +8

    That was fascinating. I wasn't aware of its origins and this brief documentary told the story exceptionally well.

  • @s-1-d30
    @s-1-d30 4 года назад +145

    we have to watch this as English homework whilst in quarantines

  • @josephel5856
    @josephel5856 7 лет назад +23

    That story is timeless.

    • @Mehlsuppe
      @Mehlsuppe 4 года назад

      It truly is. It's a PERFECT story.

    • @sabrinanascimento5248
      @sabrinanascimento5248 4 года назад

      I agree but don’t fall asleep listening to it. You’ll have a lucid dream about it. The brain is active at the time. 😩😩😩😩⚠️⚠️⚠️

    • @paulstewart6203
      @paulstewart6203 4 года назад +4

      The version starring Alastair Sims is my favorite.

  • @robinj.9329
    @robinj.9329 4 года назад +7

    I enjoy reading this out loud.
    For my whole family to enjoy!

  • @timothyj1966
    @timothyj1966 8 лет назад +14

    thanks for uploading this - great little docu of one of best short literary classics!

  • @mikewolf417
    @mikewolf417 5 лет назад +7

    Dickens A Christmas Carol is his shortest work with the BIGGEST Impact of all his writings. Since 1843, the year he wrote A Christmas carol generations have enjoyed the story of Ebeneezer Scrooge's transformation from miser to repentant in one Christmas eve night. The idea of this story of the Ghost's of Christmas Past, Present and Future showing Scrooge his life in these 3 time frames truly is a masterpiece of literature as Dickens wanted to portray how London was at the time, cold, dirty and difficult for the common man. Over the past 176 years this timeless classic has brought great joy to the masses and I think it is safe to say 176 years from now people will still be reading and watching this story as it is as timeless as Christmas itself and as Tiny Tim said, "God Bless Us, Everyone."

  • @jeffwarr11
    @jeffwarr11 3 года назад +2

    I loved the historical context which you provided to one of my favorite stories, of any season, of any era, of any Author. Thank you

  • @yelloworangered
    @yelloworangered 4 года назад +26

    Missed the initial moment. When the dead partner appears, it is not the chains that he drags forever that is the punishment. It is the inability to help others. Outside the window, we are shown many spirits wailing over the suffering persons whom they could they could have helped in life. This tells us the whole of Scrooge's escape. His partner moves back into his eternal punishment and is forgotten by the world that he never loved.

    • @Warlanda
      @Warlanda 4 года назад

      @Katherine Rigmin's School interesting point.

    • @sjw5797
      @sjw5797 4 года назад +5

      @Katherine Rigmin's School Was Marley in Purgatory or in Hell? I say Purgatory, because the souls in Hell don't care about helping people; in fact, they try to drag others into Hell with them. Converting Scrooge may have been the first step in the long road out of Purgatory for Marley. He did say that there were things he was not at liberty to reveal to Scrooge.

    • @yelloworangered
      @yelloworangered 3 года назад +6

      @@sjw5797 One can hope that Marley somehow was released from his torment, but I think it's a strength of the story that Dickens chose not to assure us of this release. By leaving it unresolved, he reinforced his message that our actions have consequences and developments beyond their immediate effect.

  • @williamcornette
    @williamcornette 8 лет назад +40

    Dickens was always one of my favorite authors, even as a child. The last thing any employer wants is to be compared in the press or on social media, to Scrooge. Keeps them from getting too arrogant! Can't get thru any of the movies without crying. Good for the soul!

  • @AmiWhiteWolf
    @AmiWhiteWolf 9 лет назад +141

    Overall Christmas carol is a beautiful piece of literature.

  • @chipperchops
    @chipperchops 9 лет назад +64

    I love his work. Perhaps we all need to feel like children again? I always picture Christmas as a time of giving, loving and caring. It also has a message that isn't just one day we should be like this always if we can afford to. Money is nothing without health and love. We are so consumed with greed it really saddens me. whatever our religion, we should always love one another, we are humans and some forget that sometimes. However, ty for a wonderful documentary.

    • @xvrays
      @xvrays 7 лет назад +2

      How true. Thank you Nicole for those kind words.

    • @charlesroberts3650
      @charlesroberts3650 6 лет назад +2

      I personally consider it an auxiliary to the "Sermon on the Mount" if I may be so bold. "Blessed are the Meek" etc. "Blessed are the Merciful, for they shall receive Mercy" Redemption.

    • @juliewitt7496
      @juliewitt7496 5 лет назад +1

      You sound like "Fred."

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 3 года назад +2

      @@charlesroberts3650 Yes the parts of the gospels that a former American president declared at a prayer breakfast that he didn't like.

    • @teijaflink2226
      @teijaflink2226 3 года назад +1

      Yeah of course we should care about each other all the time but life can be very hectic so I think it's important that no matter religion or not that there's a time where we just stop, rest and think about love, giving and is there anyone you haven't had time to contact and check how they're doing. There can never be enough of love and caring.

  • @josephkent3238
    @josephkent3238 7 лет назад +14

    Great story on Christmas day, thank you

    • @blockeontheleafeon
      @blockeontheleafeon 6 лет назад +2

      And God Bless us, EVERYONE!!! :3

    • @sabrinanascimento5248
      @sabrinanascimento5248 4 года назад

      Yes. Don’t fall asleep listening to it.⚠️⚠️😩😩😩😔Lucid Dreams. The brain is active at this time.

  • @MyGreatAuntFanny
    @MyGreatAuntFanny Месяц назад +4

    A good copy first edition of the book he is holding would set you back by about £50,000. That would buy a lot of Christmas dinners.

  • @piscesx5603
    @piscesx5603 7 лет назад +54

    As I sit here in my dimly lit bedroom on Christmas Eve night, I love this well made documentary. Very informative and interesting. :-)

    • @adamscarpetta9543
      @adamscarpetta9543 6 лет назад +3

      And here we are exactly one year later! Merry Christmas!

    • @stevenewart3873
      @stevenewart3873 6 лет назад +3

      Pisces X watch...the man who invented Christmas

  • @davidakinyemi9720
    @davidakinyemi9720 4 года назад +41

    Online homework during corona anyone ???

    • @madgy
      @madgy 4 года назад +1

      David Akinyemi you in miss Moore’s class?

    • @poopnose6934
      @poopnose6934 4 года назад

      unfortunately

    • @v36578
      @v36578 3 года назад

      Yup

    • @jinao171
      @jinao171 3 года назад

      sadly

  • @1MSRAVENCLAW
    @1MSRAVENCLAW 10 лет назад +19

    thank you so much that book did much to help at the time and even now " it cost nothing to be polite to someone". It did just what he wanted it to do, inform the masses!

  • @healinggrounds19
    @healinggrounds19 Год назад +3

    I am so excited to be directing "A Christmas Carol " for the third time in my directing career. It is one of my favorite stories.❤❤❤❤

  • @lcflngn
    @lcflngn 4 года назад +7

    Apart from nostalgia the Fezziwigs are maybe a simple reminder that happy people can make others happy.

  • @tracytaylor5115
    @tracytaylor5115 6 лет назад +17

    The 1953 film starring Alastair Sim must have used the illustrations in this first edition book to design their costumes and settings. The illustration of the Ghost of Christmas Present looks almost exactly like the film version.

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 3 года назад +2

      As good as the George C. Scott's version was, this Alistair Sims b&W version was so faithful to both the physical book and to Dicken's story.

    • @Custardpoint948
      @Custardpoint948 3 года назад +2

      Agree and the best portrayal of the book

  • @barbaralyons3978
    @barbaralyons3978 2 года назад +8

    I am Jewish, but I love this story. It is very moving.

  • @brianqian4350
    @brianqian4350 4 года назад +30

    from the comments this looks interesting, but I can't even watch this thing. Anyone doing this for homework or an assignment?

    • @sorenpx
      @sorenpx 4 года назад +2

      Why can't you watch it? It's 12 minutes long. Not exactly a huge time commitment and it's about a classic piece of literature.

    • @thisbushnell2012
      @thisbushnell2012 4 года назад

      Dickens set out to change the world with his talent, and, though progress is exceeding slow, the seed has sprouted and has produced fruit. It is up to humanity to nurture it instead of the kudzu-like strangling vine of greed and prejudice.

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 3 года назад

      I also wonder why you can't watch it. Perhaps you are not used to the lecture method of teaching. It has had a bad rap in modern education for some time but I think it has its place.

  • @carlovignati7101
    @carlovignati7101 5 лет назад +10

    A immortal masterpiece! My first name is the same of the Master...I'm very glad of that! Thanks for all Charles!!!!!

  • @trevorgill8976
    @trevorgill8976 4 года назад +6

    Fantastic piece of literature, Love, sorrow, greed, time travel, all in one novel, perhaps the finest piece of writing ever in my opinion.

    • @toastwelldunne
      @toastwelldunne 4 года назад +1

      A great seasonal tale, often copied, never yet bettered (although the Alister Simm film version skillfully adds the passing of his sister Fanny as the soul/heartbreaking trauma that starts Scrooges descent into misery).
      No time travel though, remembering the past yes, realisation of actual reality yes, recognising the possibilities and ramifications of events that might happen absolutely, but definitely no time travel. Spirits of Past and Present inform us and Scrooge that the demonstrated visions are naught but Shadows and mutual interaction is not possible.

    • @underscore2708
      @underscore2708 4 года назад

      @@toastwelldunne i can't tell if your being serious or not lmao

    • @thisbushnell2012
      @thisbushnell2012 2 года назад

      a literary gem, bijou, diamante that defies an accurate descriptive from any language.

  • @jimmytaylor1570
    @jimmytaylor1570 2 года назад +2

    Doesn't matter how he came to write it. What matters most is, it's touching lives today!

  • @isabelawhite7757
    @isabelawhite7757 6 лет назад +1

    Nice Christmas Carol song for you all happy beautiful Carol to you all

  • @jamesshielssoberlife.3701
    @jamesshielssoberlife.3701 Год назад +6

    I think the story resonates with people who get sober also. I just got to eight and a half years sober. Scrooge actually changed his brain perception of things, once he got shown a taste of how his life was going downhill.

  • @jayarajjohnson2476
    @jayarajjohnson2476 2 года назад +1

    ONE OF THE GREATEST NOVELS EVER WRITTEN. JUST LOVE IT.

  • @powerpc127
    @powerpc127 6 лет назад +6

    I just underwent three ayahuasca ceremonies. The first showed me the error of my ways in the past, the second showed me a sense of true love for myself and my existence, and the third showed me the meaning of existence and everything and allowed me to love my life. I basically just experienced Scrooge's journey, and it felt great.

    • @chasitydeanna4861
      @chasitydeanna4861 6 лет назад +1

      Curious about your story; have you documented your experience on any social media platform?

    • @powerpc127
      @powerpc127 6 лет назад +1

      @@chasitydeanna4861 I kept a private journal, but this is about the only social platform I still use, so no. Feel free to ask questions here though.

    • @maunster3414
      @maunster3414 6 лет назад

      powerpc127, I'm very happy for you! Finding true love is wonderful beyond words and keeping a journal will help you stay connected to this love.

    • @windstorm1000
      @windstorm1000 6 лет назад

      Fascinating. How fortunate and blessed you are. Is this a South American tribal ceremony.

    • @windstorm1000
      @windstorm1000 6 лет назад +1

      You also found true power.

  • @TimOf1000Tomorrows
    @TimOf1000Tomorrows 7 дней назад

    Love this story and thanks for telling about its creation. I could have enjoyed it more without the wall-to-wall plunking piano background music, FYI. I wish there was a way to mute just the background score of the video.

  • @woodsarthobbies6515
    @woodsarthobbies6515 9 лет назад +17

    It is sad that none of the theaters at that time volunteered on their own to pay Mr. Dickens a little something for his work. It was quite SCROOGE of them. This was a very interesting report.

  • @alneal100
    @alneal100 3 года назад +1

    Very well presented.

  • @cherylreed7523
    @cherylreed7523 4 дня назад

    Where would we be without the wonderful & magical Christmas Carol..(Scrooge)..
    I remember seeing it for the first time years & years ago.
    Shocking & wonderful!
    It is Christmas for me..nothing like it..Thankyou Mr Dickens ❤

  • @frankm.2850
    @frankm.2850 6 лет назад +4

    If you haven't seen the 1989 adaptation with Scott playing Scrooge, I highly recommend it. Scott's portrayal is amazing, and it also contains the most emotionally effecting, imho, portrayal of Tiny Tim. The young actor who plays Tim portrays a boy who's small for his age, gaunt, ashen faced and sickly. We see him walking once, when he goes to meet his father at the counting house, but he's clearly struggling in the snow and maybe even in some small degree of pain. Every other time he has to move he's carried by his father or siblings. This only makes the end where he runs out to meet Scrooge that much more beautiful, as this is clearly a young boy who's delighted to be able to run and play again. It's impossible to know what Timothy Cratchit suffered from, given the nature of fictional characters, but given Dickens' description, and the time period, Rickets and Tuberculosis seem likely, both of which were debilitating, but curable at the time. His line delivery occasionally leaves something to be desired, but the physical portrayal is absolutely heart rending.

  • @racheltaylor6578
    @racheltaylor6578 4 года назад +4

    The name Scrooge comes from a gravestone in the Canongate Kirk in Edinburgh.The man was called Ebenezer Scroggie.The inscription read.He was a meal man(corn merchant).Dickens thought the inscription read he was a mean man.

    • @YorkyOne
      @YorkyOne 4 года назад +1

      There is no evidence for this assertion.

    • @colleenhonderich1598
      @colleenhonderich1598 3 года назад

      @@YorkyOne no, but it's a great little anecdote!

  • @supremestofslimes9595
    @supremestofslimes9595 5 лет назад +168

    Ayy if you guys here from school, it's ya boy

  • @ajc2208
    @ajc2208 6 лет назад +6

    I love A Christmas Carol.

  • @nozrep
    @nozrep 2 года назад +1

    fascinating! Did not know any of that. Glad I clicked.

  • @ant7936
    @ant7936 2 года назад +3

    Good talk, but do we really need the muzak?

  • @joeb.fromsydneyaustralia5313
    @joeb.fromsydneyaustralia5313 3 года назад +1

    Brilliant ... Thanks so much.

  • @SuperMissblueeyes
    @SuperMissblueeyes 4 года назад +1

    Very interesting. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @GreenHornet1962
    @GreenHornet1962 Год назад +1

    Why must there always be music and why must it always be so loud? I can only understand part of what is being said.

  • @brianexplores285
    @brianexplores285 3 года назад +1

    Brilliant. Thank you.

  • @christopherclayton7688
    @christopherclayton7688 6 лет назад +2

    Very good documentary, not understanding why there's a lot of dislikes

    • @MsLegenza
      @MsLegenza 6 лет назад +1

      Christopher Clayton Because he’s telling the story that we already know instead of more interesting facts about Charles dickens.

    • @maryrichards157
      @maryrichards157 5 лет назад

      @@MsLegenza It is titled as the development of the story, not of the author. Some people just don't bother to read, I guess.

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 3 года назад

      I think it's because people aren't used to a lecture format of teaching and miss that it does have its place as a means of teaching--it just shouldn't be the sole method.

  • @lionsbru
    @lionsbru 13 дней назад

    He might have pointed out that this 1843 Christmas story was rooted in the Dickens short story "The Story of the Goblins Who Stole a Sexton", told by a character in The Pickwick Papers, published six years earlier.

    • @lizzy-wx4rx
      @lizzy-wx4rx 11 дней назад

      Also, the rich, miserly uncle in Nicholas Nickleby (1839) is basically Scrooge without the redemption arc. I was struck by the similarities and surprised I've never heard it mentioned.

  • @sarahmoviereviewer4109
    @sarahmoviereviewer4109 5 лет назад +7

    I play this at Christmas when I'm at my grandmother's

  • @Ad-Infinitum
    @Ad-Infinitum 2 года назад +1

    Is that a first edition or an early edition of A Christmas Carol?

  • @charlie418791
    @charlie418791 3 месяца назад +1

    The best story of redemption ever written.

    • @danieljackowitz2343
      @danieljackowitz2343 16 дней назад +1

      IMO, the Bible beats it. But A Christmas Carol is a wonderful example of redemption!

  • @peterrobertson2580
    @peterrobertson2580 13 дней назад

    This discourse varies with just about everything else on RUclips in one important aspect. This video states that Dickens lost the case against those "pirates" who published an unauthorized version of the Carol. What is reported elsewhere is that Dickens won the case, but that the costs of the legal proceedings bankrupted the publishers of the unauthorized version, which ended up costing Dickens 700 pounds to settle. That, in their telling, is what left him without any meaningful profit from the short story. Which is the factual version?
    Otherwise, the 1951 Alastair Sim version is one of my earliest vivid memories of Christmas, dating back 60+ years to a time when I was probably 6. Since that time, I have never passed a Christmas Eve without watching it. By the way, it is a showcase for some of the best character actors that you could find, which includes Alastair Sim - but then the British always seem to have the market cornered on great character actors. Absolutely my favorite Christmas film (slightly ahead of Its A Wonderful Life) and one of my favorite movies of all time. This video provided some excellent context and explanation. I especially thought the nostalgia, pity, and fear cocktail to be very illuminating in defining the source of the conversion's power. Very thoughtful piece on a timeless classic.

  • @ruthtepin2130
    @ruthtepin2130 19 дней назад

    I read that Dickens sued Parley's Illuminated Library for publishing a pirated version and won. They didn't end up paying because they declared bankruptcy but they also didn't complete the story.

  • @michaeljones-qy5wj
    @michaeljones-qy5wj 3 года назад

    My absolute favourite story of all time

  • @BryanMardis
    @BryanMardis 8 лет назад +5

    is there anywhere I could get a replica of this exact book?

    • @QED_
      @QED_ 8 лет назад +1

      Search for "A Christmas Carol First Edition Facsimile". RUclips won't allow me to offer any examples here -- it would be flagged as spam . . .

  • @uhf001
    @uhf001 21 день назад +1

    When confronted about child labor and his Air Jordans, MJ said..."just do it"!

  • @robertleonard4995
    @robertleonard4995 7 лет назад +5

    It was written in Boston as he was visiting America. At the omni Parker house, and read at an underground Boston theater for the first time....

    • @windstorm1000
      @windstorm1000 6 лет назад +2

      No. Written in London

    • @evangelinamurray147
      @evangelinamurray147 4 года назад

      Written in Italy

    • @YorkyOne
      @YorkyOne 4 года назад

      @@evangelinamurray147
      London.

    • @sav7568
      @sav7568 2 года назад

      It would have been impossible to write that book anywhere but London. It could not have been published in time for Christmas otherwise. The whole project was very rushed which is why the book is so thin.

  • @lilcicero77
    @lilcicero77 8 лет назад

    excellent. And Slater is himself a very modest and benevolent man.

    • @carolsecret7517
      @carolsecret7517 8 лет назад +1

      This could be called Rothschild....repent like Scrooge, Rothschild and Rockefeller!

  • @colinp2238
    @colinp2238 8 лет назад +8

    Mr Slater makes a mistake here - Scrooge was visited by four ghosts not three, Marley and the three Christmas spirits.

    • @ohger1
      @ohger1 8 лет назад +6

      Marley was a ghost, the rest were spirits. Not interchangeable

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 3 года назад

      @@ohger1 what's the difference? Both are supernatural beings and their existance has never been validated by evidence.

    • @TransKidRevolution
      @TransKidRevolution 12 дней назад

      Ok karen. In the story there is a difference. The ghost of Marley was once a living man. The spirits were only supernatural and never living beings.

  • @rollingring6607
    @rollingring6607 5 дней назад

    I always wondered about the name 'Scrooge'. A combination of Screw and Gouge. Brilliant!

  • @rong1924
    @rong1924 18 дней назад +1

    15 shillings a week was apparently reasonable wage for the day, although it would be stretched thin with a large family.

  • @MultiSirens
    @MultiSirens 3 года назад

    Interesting your view? However that being said,I watched another program that disputes the date, he has it as the 19 of December coming out. And his publisher wanted something so Dickens scribbled off this tale to satisfy the said publisher? Who is correct?

  • @itkapatanka
    @itkapatanka 10 лет назад +8

    wonderful thanks I would have enjoyed another hour...!

  • @jackhartnell2795
    @jackhartnell2795 5 лет назад +1

    So inspirational

  • @coryturke7336
    @coryturke7336 7 дней назад

    I'm confused. Others have said that the origin of the name "Scrooge" was from Charles, who loved reading headstones in graveyards, came across a man's headstone with the same last name, but Charles had misread the tombstone when he read "Here's lies a mean man." when in fact it said "Here lies a meal man." because the man was a corn vendor.
    There are other accounts of how he got the name Scrooge as well. Anyone know the ACTUAL answer to this? I'd love to put it to rest.

  • @philipinchina
    @philipinchina 3 года назад

    Very good. It would be improved by removal of the background music.

  • @patriciamersman3413
    @patriciamersman3413 23 дня назад +4

    I would like this video a whole lot better without the intrusive, anachronistic “music” interfering with the speaker.

  • @LindaMerchant-bq2hp
    @LindaMerchant-bq2hp Месяц назад +1

    I always thought the ghost of present Christmas was st. Nicholas santa claus father christmas

  • @kevinmitchell2074
    @kevinmitchell2074 3 года назад +1

    Informative

  • @rdvqc
    @rdvqc 8 лет назад +9

    A discussion with Christmas Present often missed. It regards the forced closing of the bakers on Sunday that the poor used to roast meats.
    “Spirit,” said Scrooge, after a moment’s thought, “I wonder you, of all the beings in the many worlds about us, should desire to cramp these people’s opportunities of innocent enjoyment.”
    “I!” cried the Spirit.
    “You would deprive them of their means of dining every seventh day, often the only day on which they can be said to dine at all,” said Scrooge. “Wouldn’t you?”
    “I!” cried the Spirit.
    “You seek to close these places on the Seventh Day?” said Scrooge. “And it comes to the same thing.”
    “I seek!” exclaimed the Spirit.
    “Forgive me if I am wrong. It has been done in your name, or at least in that of your family,” said Scrooge.
    “There are some upon this earth of yours,” returned the Spirit, “who lay claim to know us, and who do their deeds of passion, pride, ill-will, hatred, envy, bigotry, and selfishness in our name, who are as strange to us and all our kith and kin, as if they had never lived. Remember that, and charge their doings on themselves, not us.”
    Scrooge promised that he would; and they went on, invisible, as they had been before, into the suburbs of the town. It was a remarkable quality of the Ghost (which Scrooge had observed at the baker’s), that notwithstanding his gigantic size, he could accommodate himself to any place with ease; and that he stood beneath a low roof quite as gracefully and like a supernatural creature, as it was possible he could have done in any lofty hall.

  • @525Lines
    @525Lines 5 лет назад +1

    The reason books from this period are so cheaply bound is because people were expected to have them bound in leather. I've seen earlier bindings even cheaper. Some of Dickens' works were even sold chapter by chapter like pamphlets. They would later be bound as a complete book.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 3 года назад

      Many of his novels were written in serialised form to go into The Pickwick Papers, of which Dickens was the editor. He was paid by the word count so wrote lengthy descriptions of people and places. Those instalments could then be gathered into a single volume.

  • @lawmaker22
    @lawmaker22 5 лет назад +3

    Is there better day than Christmas in year? I dont think so... Thanks to Jesus ofcourse, Charles Dickens and other victorians and all writers of beautiful christmas songs

    • @redeemedandblessed
      @redeemedandblessed 3 года назад

      Well said! Hope you have a blessed Holiday season! Happy Thanksgiving and a very Merry Christmas. May God bless you and bring you a happy New Year!

  • @Shackleton71
    @Shackleton71 16 дней назад

    Like most anything - the book is supremely better than the films. I love that Dickens determined to write for a cause and not just to make himself wealthy (or for popular appeal solely).

  • @TotalFreedomTTT-pk9st
    @TotalFreedomTTT-pk9st Год назад +1

    Maybe it being expensive and more accessible to 'the rich' was because his lesson was to some of those 'rich' - who had become Scrooge like - although everyone needs a reminder to keeps things in perspective at least once a year

  • @richardranke7878
    @richardranke7878 9 лет назад +8

    Someone once said to me that she knew people who were unaware that many Christmas stories were books before they were movies.She named many well-known stories-and when she even named A Christmas Carol,my reaction was;"The Dickens You Say!"

    • @AegisNova
      @AegisNova 9 лет назад +3

      Well played.

    • @Prancer1231
      @Prancer1231 7 лет назад +4

      The ignorance of most people today is appalling. I'm sure there are many who don't know that the "Nativity Story" is from the Bible.

    • @YorkyOne
      @YorkyOne 4 года назад +1

      @@Prancer1231
      Give over!

  • @Mistfall254
    @Mistfall254 7 лет назад +3

    So the entire tome is a metaphor interesting

  • @Khamwese
    @Khamwese 16 дней назад

    Jacob Marley is looking good! 👍 "Gawd bless us! One an' all!" 🎅💫

  • @narsfy58
    @narsfy58 4 года назад

    what is the back round music ruclips.net/video/cTHAN3_P7uE/видео.html

  • @justinchow7062
    @justinchow7062 3 года назад +4

    who is brought here by online homework?

  • @occidentadvocate.9759
    @occidentadvocate.9759 3 года назад

    Charles Dickens. Genuis!

  • @extramile150
    @extramile150 Год назад

    wonderful

  • @LindaMerchant-bq2hp
    @LindaMerchant-bq2hp Месяц назад +1

    Christmas carol oliver twist Nicholas nickelby david coppoefield tale of two cities Pickwick papers literary masterpieces ❤

  • @robnewman6101
    @robnewman6101 2 года назад +1

    Oliver Twist. 1837 Novel by Charles Dickens.

  • @flamelily2086
    @flamelily2086 3 года назад +1

    Charles Dickens had to get a job at the age of 12 when his father was incarcerated in debtors prison, so he was also writing from personal experience.

  • @Canuckmom128
    @Canuckmom128 7 лет назад +6

    Such an enigma, that he could write such a cautionary tale, and yet he was not exactly a "nice" guy. In fact, he was a bit of an abusive bully to his wife, and grew worse with age. The woman had an incredible constitution for that time - almost too good, as he managed to keep her pregnant for most of her 20s and early 30s and she didn't die. Her younger sister, Mary lived with them, and Dickens liked to tell his peers AND his poor wife that Mary was his ideal woman. When Mary died very suddenly, Dickens' wife had a miscarriage, and he all but blamed her. By the time she was 40, fat and older than her years after bearing all his children, he had fallen for some 18 yr. old actress, and separated from his wife, forcing her from the family home and separating her from her children. He couldn't divorce her because she had not committed adultery. When Dickens was 12 his Father was thrown into debtor's prison and he was sent to work at a "Blackening" company, pasting labels on jars for 10 to 12 hours a day. For some peculiar reason, he blamed his Mother for this, and I think the trauma and shame gave him something close to PTSD. As this Prof. mentions, the Christmas Past scene of being alone and left behind in school at Christmas is a reference to his childhood. Old CD couldn't quite see the Forrest for the trees, and his poor wife bore the brunt of it.

    • @justtruth5855
      @justtruth5855 6 лет назад +3

      He also wanted to keep the slave trade of that time.

    • @windstorm1000
      @windstorm1000 6 лет назад +2

      I don't think Dickens quite exercised his demons. He was able to do in his art but not in his life.

    • @YorkyOne
      @YorkyOne 4 года назад +2

      @@justtruth5855
      I think you should change your name to 'just lies'. Dickens was firmly against American slavery and spoke out against it on many occasions.

    • @katg109
      @katg109 4 года назад

      I realize this is a comment to a 2 y/o observation but couldn’t resist. I had heard about how he treated his wife later in life. He seems to have been able to look upon sins of a distance with more accuracy than those closer to him. We can rationalize anything. The heart is deceitful above all things.

  • @jeromemckenna7102
    @jeromemckenna7102 4 года назад

    They didn't use the term then but in marketing terms it was a 'loss leader'.

  • @ryanparry7583
    @ryanparry7583 3 месяца назад

    Anyone doing they’re hw rn. What motivated Dickens to write the novel cause it’s not in this video

  • @judyjing7980
    @judyjing7980 4 года назад

    For some reason got this video for music class

  • @MrMick50
    @MrMick50 3 года назад

    Best Christmas movie ever A Christmas Carol with Alester Simms

  • @kilowhiskeyalpha6078
    @kilowhiskeyalpha6078 3 года назад

    Not sure what the Novel had to do with child exploitation. More likely this was a commentary on the insidious money lending business, Dickens father was imprisoned for debt which had a profound psychological effect upon him. The theme of debtors ran quite strongly through his work including Little Dorrit, The Pickwick Papers and David Copperfield. The business of Scrooge and Marley was quite obviously money lending given the origin of their names Ebenezer and Jacob belonging as they do to a certain faith.

  • @craftybarb6220
    @craftybarb6220 3 года назад

    That was interesting. But I did not like the intrusion of the back ground music. It is not needed and spoils a good talk, not only this one but all documentaries. Many many times I have stopped watching because of background music.

  • @markross2124
    @markross2124 4 года назад

    Good analysis but also the part of him interacting with his nephew