Charles Dickens
A Christmas Carol
Introduction
Please wait
for the page to be loaded…
Charles Dickens was
born in 1812. He was thirty-one years
old and already a very successful novelist when A Christmas Carol first appeared in 1843. By that time
he had already written the Pickwick
Papers (1836-37) and the novels Oliver Twist (1838), Nicholas Nickleby (1839) and The Old Curiosity Shop (1841). But it had not been easy for
Dickens to become the best-selling writer in English in his time.
Charles
was the son of a clerk in a government office. His father spent too much, and
like Mr Micawber in Dickens's David
Copperfield written in
1849, he was sent to prison because he owed money and could not pay it back.
Caroline's husband in Chapter Four in this book is afraid of being sent to
prison for owing money to a man without mercy. Sending a man to prison until he
had paid the money he owed seems very silly to us today, but it was the law in
Dickens's time. Perhaps Dickens's books helped to show the foolishness as well
as the unkindness of such treatment, since Dickens could make his readers not
only weep but laugh at foolishness. The result, for Charles Dickens himself, of
his father's imprisonment was very bad.
He was twelve years old when his father went to prison, and Charles
himself had to go to work. It was very unpleasant work, and the pay and
conditions were very bad.
For us,
Dickens's early troubles have meant stories by a writer who really knew poor
people and the difficulty of their lives. He understood them, and his books
probably did more than anything else to make life better for them.
After
this book was printed and ready to be sold in time for Christmas 1843, the
writer had a short Christmas holiday and enjoyed himself like Scrooge at Fred's
party in the last chapter of this book. The book, in a red and gold hard cover,
price five shillings (twenty-five pence), was a great success. By Christmas Eve
the bookshops had sold six thousand copies, and orders were coming in from all
parts of the country. Lord Jeffrey wrote to Dickens:
Blessings on your
kind heart… you can be sure you have done more good by this little book, caused
more kind feelings, and made more people give freely to help the poor and
suffering than all the words in churches.
Unfortunately
the price of five shillings was high for a book of the kind at that time, but
the cost of printing and adding coloured drawings was high too, so the amount
Dickens himself received was not great.
Christmas in
Before
Christmas and on Christmas Day, people sang 'carols, joyful songs with words
like:
God
rest you merry, gentlemen ...
or:
Christmas
is coming, the geese are getting fat,
Please
put a penny in the old man's hat
It was
a time for giving. People gave presents to their children, and money and other
help to the poor. Such help was needed because people had not yet learnt to
make the care of the poor, the sick and the unfortunate a public duty. You have
an example in this book of two gentlemen trying to get money from Scrooge,
saying:
"Many thousands are cold and have no food, and
many have no home to go to."
Those
who had enough money had a big family dinner after coming home from church. A
Christmas dinner is described in this book: goose (or turkey for those with
more money) with vegetables, followed by Christmas pudding.
CHAPTERS
Marley’s ghost
The
names on the door of the office were SCROOGE AND MARLEY.
Marley
was dead. He died seven years ago. Scrooge never painted out Marley's name.
There it
was, years afterwards, on the office door:
SCROOGE
AND MARLEY. The business was known as Scrooge and Marley. Sometimes people did
not know the business called Scrooge "Scrooge", and sometimes they
called him "Marley", but he answered to both names. He didn't mind
what he was called.
He was a
hard man with money, hard as stone. He was a secret man, friendless and alone.
The coldness inside him froze his old face. His eyes were red. His thin 1ips
were blue. You could see cold in his way of walking. He carried this coldness
with him always, wherever he went. It made his office cold in the summer, and
at Christmas time it was even colder.
No one
ever stopped Scrooge in the street to say, "My dear Scrooge, how are you?
When will you come and see me?" No poor people asked him for a penny. No
children asked him, "What time is it?" No man or woman had ever asked
him to tell them the way to a place. Even the blind men's dogs seemed to know
him and, when they saw him coming, they pulled their owners back into the
doorway. But Scrooge did not care. He liked it. He liked walking through the
crowd and making all men keep their distance from him.
It was
Christmas Eve, the twenty-fourth of December, the evening before Christmas Day.
Old Scrooge was busy in his office. It was very cold:
Scrooge
could hear the people outside in the street beating their hands together to
warm them. There was a thick fog: it was only three o'clock but it was quite dark
already. It had not been light all day. Candles were burning in the windows of,
the offices near his. The fog came pouring in - even through the keyhole. The
fog was so thick that you could hardly see the houses on the other side of the street.
The door
of Scrooge's office was open so that he could watch his clerk. The clerk worked
in a very small room on the other side of the passage. Scrooge had a very small
fire, but the clerk's fire was even smaller. He could not add coal to it
because Scrooge kept the coal box in his room.
"Merry
Christmas, uncle, and God bless you!" cried a happy voice. It was the
voice of Scrooge's nephew Fred.
"Bah!"
said Scrooge. "Humbug!"
Scrooge's nephew had been walking quickly in the cold air. His face was
bright, his eyes shone, and you could see his breath in the cold air.
"Do
you say that Christmas is a humbug, uncle?" he said. "You don't mean
that, do you?"
"Yes,
I do," said Scrooge. "Merry Christmas! Bah! What right have you to be merry? What reason have you to
be merry? You're too poor to be merry.
"Oh!"
said the nephew, laughing. "What
right have you to be so solemn and sad? You are rich enough."
Scrooge
had no better answer ready, so he said "Bah!" again and followed it
with "Hum-bug!"
"Don't
be angry," said the nephew.
"What
else can I be," said the uncle, "when I live in a world of fools such
as this? Merry Christmas! What is Christmas time to you except a time for
spending more money than you have, a time for finding yourself a year older but
not an hour richer, a time for finding that you have less money than you had at
Christmas a year ago? I think," said Scrooge angrily, "that every
fool who goes about saying 'Merry Christmas!' should be boiled with his own
Christmas dinner!"
"Uncle!"
said the nephew.
"Nephew!"
said the uncle. "Spend Christmas in your own way, and let me spend it in
mine."
"Spend
it?" said Fred. "But you don't spend it!"
"What
good has it ever done you?" "It has done me a great deal of
good," said the nephew.
"Christmas
is a good time, a kind, forgiving, pleasant time. It's the only time in the
year when men and women seem to open their shut-up hearts freely. And
therefore, uncle, although it has never put any gold or silver in my pocket, I
believe that Christmas has done me good and will do me good, and I say 'God
bless it!'"
"Humbug!"
said Scrooge.
"Don't
be angry, uncle. Come and have dinner
with us tomorrow."
"Certainly
not!" said Scrooge. "Good afternoon!"
"But
I don't want anything from you. Why can't we be friends?"
"Good
afternoon!" said Scrooge.
"I
am sorry you won't join us. We have never had any quarrel. At least, I have
never quarrelled. But because it's Christmas, I have tried again to be a
friend, and I will still keep my Christmas kind feelings. So 'A merry
Christmas!' uncle."
"Good
afternoon!" said Scrooge.
"And
a happy New Year!"
"Good
afternoon!" said Scrooge.
Fred
stopped at the door to say "Merry Christmas!" to the clerk, who,
although he was so cold, answered warmly, "Merry Christmas to you,
sir!"
"There's
another fellow!" said Scrooge, who had heard what he said. "My clerk,
with less than a pound a week and a wife and family, talking about a merry
Christmas! He must be mad!"
As the
clerk opened the door to let Scrooge's nephew out, he let in two other people. They
were well-dressed gentlemen and stood with their hats off in Scrooge's office.
They had books and papers in their hands.
"Scrooge
and Marley's, I believe?" said one of the gentlemen, looking at the list.
"Am I speaking to Mr Scrooge or to Mr Marley?"
"Mr
Marley is dead," answered Scrooge. "He died seven years ago this very
night."
"Oh! At this happy season of the year, Mr
Scrooge," said the gentleman, taking up his pen, we usually try to do
something for the poor. They are suffering greatly at this present time. Many
thousands are cold and have no food, and many have no home to go to."
"Are
there no prisons?" asked Scrooge.
"There
are plenty of prisons," said the gentleman, putting down his pen.
"Are
there no workhouses for the poor?"
"There
are," said the gentleman. "I wish that so many were not needed."
"I
was afraid from what you said that something had happened to stop the prisons
and workhouses doing their usual work," said Scrooge. "I am glad to
hear that there are still prisons and workhouses."
"Prisons
and workhouses can't really make people merry at Christmas time," said the
gentle-man. "A few of us are asking people to give money to buy some food
and drink for the poor. How much will you give us?"
"Nothing!"
said Scrooge. "I don't make merry myself
at Christmas time, and I won't give money to make lazy people merry. Good
afternoon, gentlemen!"
Seeing
that they were wasting their time, the gentlemen went out of the room.
The fog
became thicker. The darkness became darker. The cold became colder. At last the
hour for shutting up the office arrived. Scrooge got down from his chair. The
clerk put out his candle and put on his hat.
"You'll
want to be at home all day tomorrow, I suppose?" said Scrooge.
"Yes,
sir, if you don't mind."
"I
do mind," said Scrooge. "It is not fair or just. If I were to pay you
fifteen pence less for that wasted day, you would think that I was being unjust
to you.
The
clerk smiled.
"And
yet," said Scrooge, "you don't think it unjust to me when I have to
pay you for a day on which you do not work."
"It's
only once a year," said the clerk.
"That
is not a good reason for stealing fifteen pence from my pocket every
twenty-fifth of December," said Scrooge. "But I suppose you must have
the whole day. Be here early the next morning."
Scrooge
went out, and the clerk shut up the office and ran home to
Scrooge
had dinner in a cheap eating-house and then went home. He had rooms in a house
which had once been Marley's. They were dark and uncomfortable rooms in an old
house in a dark courtyard. All the rest of the rooms in the house were offices.
No one lived there except Scrooge.
He
unlocked the door, went in and lit a candle, then went upstairs to his rooms.
Before he shut his heavy door he walked through his rooms to see that
everything was all right. He went into the sitting-room, the bedroom, the
storeroom. Everything was all right. There was nobody under the table, nobody
under the bed.
There
was a small fire burning in the fire-place. He shut the door of his rooms and
locked it, then went and sat down by the fire.
There
was a noise down below as if some person was pulling a heavy chain. The noise
came up the stairs straight towards his door.
"It's
humbug!" said Scrooge. "I won't believe it ".
Something
came through the heavy door and came into the room. The dying fire sprang up
the fireplace.
It was
Marley - Marley dressed as he had always dressed when he was alive. The chain
was wound round him - a chain loaded with money-boxes, keys, locks, boxes of
account books, business papers and money bags. Scrooge, as he looked at him,
could see through his body. He could see the two buttons on the back of
Marley's coat.
"Well?"
said Scrooge in his cold voice, "what do you want?"
"A
lot!"
Yes, it
was Marley's voice.
"Who
are you?" Scrooge wanted to know.
"Ask
me who I was!"
"Who were you,
then?" said Scrooge.
"In life I was Jacob
Marley. You don't believe in me," said the ghost.
"No," said
Scrooge, "I do not."
"You don't believe
your eyes.
"No,"
said Scrooge, "I do not. I don't always trust my eyes. You may be the
result of something I have eaten - some cheese, or some meat which was not well
cooked. Humbug, I tell you, humbug!"
At this
the ghost gave a fearful cry and shook its chain with a frightening noise. Then
it took off the cloth which was tied round its head, and its mouth, fell open
like the mouth of a dead man.
Scrooge
fell on his knees and held his hands in front of his face. "Why!" he
cried. "Why have you come to trouble me?"
"Now,"
said the ghost, "do you believe in me or not?"
"I
do," said Scrooge, "I do! But why must the spirits of the dead walk
the earth, and why does one come to me?"
"Every
man," answered the ghost, "should in his lifetime walk among his
fellow men. He should share their
sorrows and their joys. But a man does not do this in life, then his spirit
must wander through the world after his death and see the sorrows and joys it
can no longer share.”
Again
the ghost gave a cry and shook chain.
"You
are chained!" said Scrooge, shaking with fear "Tell me why."
"I
am wearing the chain that I made during my life," replied the ghost.
"I made every part of it, and bound it on myself. Do you want to know the
weight and length of the chain that you yourself have? It was as heavy and as
long as one seven Christmas Eves ago, and you have made it heavier and longer
since."
"Don't
tell me any more. Say something to make me less afraid."
"There
is nothing to say," the ghost replied "I can't rest. I can't stay
here. I must go. In life my spirit never walked outside the office - never left
business and money-making - but now, there are many fearful journeys I must
make."
"Seven
years dead!" thought Scrooge, travelling all the time!"
"The
whole time," said the ghost. "No rest. No peace. It is at this time
of the year that I suffer most. Why did I walk through the crowds of my fellow
men with my eyes turned down? Were there no poor homes to which I could have
taken help? ... Hear me!"
"I
will," said Scrooge, "I will! But don't be hard on me."
"I
have sat beside you unseen day after day." This was not a pleasant thought
for Scrooge. "I am here tonight," continued the ghost, "to warn
you. You still have a chance."
"You
were always a good friend to me," said Scrooge. "I thank you."
"You
will be visited," said the ghost, "by three spirits. Expect the first
one tomorrow when the church bell sounds one o'clock. Expect the second on the next night at the
same time, and the third on the next night when the bell has sounded midnight.
You won't see me any more, but remember what I have said."
The
ghost took the cloth from the table and tied it round its head. Then it walked
backwards from Scrooge. At every step it took, the window opened a little. When
the ghost reached it, it was wide open. Scrooge heard in the outside air cries
of sorrow and weeping. The ghost listened for a moment, and then added its own
unhappy sounds and disappeared out into the night.
Scrooge
followed to the window and looked out. The air was full of ghosts, wandering
this way and that, and weeping as they went. Every one of them wore a chain
like Marley's chain some of them had been men Scrooge knew in their lives, and
all were weeping because they wanted so badly to help their fellow men and women,
and had lost the power to do so.
The
ghosts disappeared into the fog, and the voices were silent. The night became
as it had been when Scrooge walked home. He closed the window. He tried the
door. It was locked as he had locked it. He tried to say "Humbug!"
but stopped. Then, without taking off his clothes, he threw himself on his bed
and fell asleep.
The
first of the three spirits
When Scrooge awoke, it was dark. Looking from his bed,
he could hardly see the window: it was as dark as the walls of the room. He
listened. Then he heard the church bell sound twelve. But it was past two when
he went to bed: the clock must be wrong. Perhaps the works of the clock were
frozen. Twelve!
"It isn't possible!" said Scrooge.
"I can't have slept through a whole day and far into another night. This
must be twelve midday."
He got out of bed, went to the window and
looked out. All he could see was that it was still very foggy and very cold,
and there was no sound of people moving about the streets as there would be at
midday.
Scrooge went to bed again. He thought about
what had happened. He was thinking, "Was it all a dream?" Then he
heard the clock - ding-dong.
"A quarter past twelve," said
Scrooge. Then later he heard ding-dong
again.
"Half past twelve," said Scrooge.
Again -ding-dong. "A
quarter to one," said Scrooge. ... "A quarter to one!" And he
remembered that Marley's ghost had warned him to expect a visit at one o'clock.
Ding-dong. "One
o'clock," said Scrooge, "and nothing has happened."
But just as he spoke, a light came into the
room. He sat up - and found himself face to face
with an unearthly visitor.
It was a strange figure, like a child - and yet not
quite like a child, in some ways like an old man, an old man who had become no bigger
than a child. The hair, hanging down on its neck, was white as if with age, and
yet the face was young. It was dressed in pure white. It held a branch of holly
in its hand, but there were summer flowers on the dress. The strangest thing of
all was that from the top of its head there came a bright clear light. But the
spirit held under its arm a large cap as if that were used to put down over the
light and hide it, or put it out.
"Marley said that a Spirit would visit me.
Are you the spirit?" asked Scrooge.
"I am." The voice was soft and
gentle.
"Who and what are you?" asked
Scrooge.
"I am the Ghost of Christmas Past."
"Long past?" asked Scrooge.
"No. Your past."
Perhaps Scrooge could not have told anybody why
he had a wish to see the spirit in its cap. "Do put on your cap," he
said.
"What?" said the spirit. "Do you
want so quickly to put out the light I give? Is it not enough that your evil
nature made this cap, and you have forced me through many years to wear it low
on my head. ... Come, walk with me!"

The spirit put out a strong hand and took
Scrooge by the arm. It led him towards
the window.
"If I go out there," said Scrooge,
"I'll fall!"
The spirit laid its hand on Scrooge's heart.
"This," it said, "will hold you up."
They passed through the wall and stood on an open
country road with fields on each side of it. The city had disappeared. The
darkness and the fog had gone. It was a clear cold winter day with snow on the
ground.
Scrooge looked around.
"This," he said, "this is the
place where I was born. I was a boy here."
"You remember the way?" asked the
spirit.
"Remember it?" cried Scrooge. "I
could walk it with my eyes shut!"
"It is strange that you have forgotten it
for so many years," said the spirit. "Let's go on."
They walked along the road. Scrooge knew every
gate, every post, every tree. Then a little town was seen in the distance with
its bridge, its church and the slow-flowing river. He saw some boys riding
horses towards him and calling to other boys. They were very happy and shouted
to each other so that the broad fields were full of merry music and the air
laughed to hear it.
"These are only the shadows of things that
have been," said the spirit. "They don't see us."
The happy travellers came on, and as they came
Scrooge knew and named every one. He heard them say "Merry Christmas"
to each other as they separated at the
crossroads and went each to his own home.
"They have come from the school, but it is
not quite empty," said the spirit. "There is one child there, a child
who has no friends. He is left there still when all the others have gone."
Yes," said Scrooge.
"I know it." And he wept.
They went along a well-remembered lane and came
to a large red house. It was empty: the rich man who had built it had lost his
money. The gates had fallen, and the windows were broken. They went into the
empty hall and across it to a door at the back of the house. There they saw a
long ugly room with desks and seats in it, and at one of the desks a boy sat
reading.
Scrooge sat down next to the boy and wept to
see his poor forgotten self as once he used to be. He seemed to see into the
boy's mind the things that he was reading. "Oh, it's Ali Baba!" cried
Scrooge. "Dear old Ali Baba! Yes, I know. One Christmas time, when this
child was left here all alone, Ali Baba came to him in his story book. Ah, yes,
and the Giant in the Pot! Um-m-m! And Robinson Crusoe with his Man Friday
running for his life along the shore.
Poor boy!" said Scrooge, and then he put his hand in his pocket.
"Oh!" he said "- but it's too late now."
"What's the matter?" asked the
spirit.
"Nothing," said Scrooge, "nothing. -
But there was a boy singing a Christmas carol at my door last night. I wish I
had given him something, but it's too late now.
The spirit smiled and waved his hand. "Let's see
another Christmas."
The room became darker, and there he was, alone again
when all the other boys had gone home to their happy holidays. He was not reading now but walking sadly up
and down. Then the door opened, and a little girl, much younger than the boy,
came in. She put her arms round his neck. Then she kissed him and said,
"Dear, dear brother. I have come to bring you home."
"Home, little Fan?" said the boy.
"Yes," said the child happily, "home
for always, home for ever and ever. Father is much kinder than he used to be.
He spoke gently to me one night when I was going to bed, and I was not afraid
to ask him once more if you might come home. He said 'Yes' and he has sent me
in a carriage to bring you. We'll be all together this Christmas and have the
happiest time in all the world."
"You are quite a woman, little Fan," said
the boy. She laughed and tried to touch his head, but she was too little, so
she laughed again.
"Dear little Fan!" said Scrooge. "She
was so little, not very strong."
"So little," said the spirit,
"but she had a big heart. She died when she was a young woman and had, I
think, children."
"One child," said Scrooge.
"True," said the spirit. "Your
nephew Fred."
"Yes," said Scrooge.
They had left the school. Scrooge looked round. They
were now in a busy street of the city. The spirit stopped at the door of a big
store-house. "Do you know this place?" it asked.
"Know it?" said Scrooge. "Yes! I
first began work here!"
They went in. There was an old gentleman
sitting behind a high desk.
"It's old Fezziwig, bless his heart! It's
Fezziwig alive again!"
Old Fezziwig put down his pen and looked up at
the clock, which showed the hour of seven. He rubbed his hands and then laughed
and called out in a fat merry voice, "Ho there! Ebenezer! Dick!"
Scrooge's former self, now a young man, came
in, and with him was his fellow clerk.
"Dick Wilkins!" said Scrooge to the
spirit. "Dear me, yes, there he is! He was a great friend. Poor Dick!
Dear, dear!"
"Come, my boys," said Fezziwig.
"No more work tonight! It's Christmas Eve. Let's shut up the office, clear
away the desks and chairs and make ready for the party."
Everything that could be moved was pushed to one side.
The lamps were turned up and more coal was put on the fire.
A fiddler came in with his fiddle. Mrs Fezziwig came
in with the three Miss Fezziwigs, smiling and lovable, and behind the Miss
Fezziwigs came the young men who were in love with them. Then in came all the
young men and women who worked in the store-house. The fiddler played, and the
dancing began. There was cake and meat and wine.
At last the dancing came to an end. The clock struck
eleven, and the party was over. Mr and Mrs Fezziwig stood one on each side of
the door, shaking hands with everybody as they went out, and wishing each of
them a merry Christmas.
During the whole of this time, Scrooge had been very
excited. His heart and soul were there with his former self. He remembered
everything and enjoyed everything. It was only now, when the party was over,
that he remembered the spirit and saw that it was looking at him. The light on
its head burned very clear.
"It was a small thing," said the spirit,
"to make those unimportant people so happy and thankful."
"A small thing!" said Scrooge.
The spirit wanted him to listen to the two young men.
They were talking about Fezziwig and saying what a fine man he was.
"Was he so wonderful?" asked the spirit. "He
spent a few pounds of money - that was all."
"It was more than that," said
Scrooge. "He had the power to make us happy or unhappy, to make our work
light or heavy, a pleasure or a sorrow. His power lay in words and looks - in
things so small that it isn't possible to add and count them up. The happiness
he gave was quite as great as if it had cost thousands of pounds."
He felt the spirit looking at him, and stopped.
"What's the matter?" asked the
spirit.
"I would like to say a word or two to my
friend, Dick Wilkins." But one of the young men turned down the lamps, and
Scrooge and the spirit stood side by side in the open air.
"My time grows short," said the
spirit. "Quick!"
Again Scrooge saw himself. He was older now, a grown man.
There was a restless look in his eye which showed that the love of gold had
already become his master.
He was not alone but sat by the side of a young
girl. There were tears in her eyes. “No” she said softly. "Another love
has taken my place in your heart. I hope it may make you happy in the future,
as I would have tried to do."
"What love?" he asked.
"The love of gold. You are changed: you
are not the same man that you were when first we met."
He was going to speak, but her head was turned
away from him. She said, "I set
you free. May you be happy in the life that you have chosen." And
she left him.
"Spirit," cried Scrooge, "don't show me
any more! Take me home!" But the spirit held him and forced him to see
what happened next.
They were in another place, a room not very large, but
beautiful. Near the fire there was a lovely young girl, and opposite her sat
her mother. The mother was the woman Scrooge had loved and lost, now older.
There was a great noise in the room. There were a lot
of children, all enjoying themselves noisily. The mother and daughter seemed to
be enjoying the noise and fun. Then the door opened and the father came in,
carrying Christmas presents. There were shouts of delight as each present was
opened.
At last the children went up the stairs to the top of
the house to go to bed.
The man sat down by the fire with his daughter and
her mother.
"Well," said the husband, turning to his
wife with a smile. "I saw an old friend of yours this afternoon.
"Who was it?"
"Guess!"
"How can I? I don't know." And then she
added, "It wasn't Mr Scrooge?"
"Yes," he said, "it was Mr Scrooge. I
passed his office window. There was a candle burning inside, and I saw him. Mr
Marley is dying, I hear, and there Scrooge sat alone, quite alone in the
world."
"Spirit," cried Scrooge in a broken voice,
"take me home!"
"I told you," said the spirit, "that
these are the shadows of things that have been. They are what you have made
them."
"Leave me! Take me home!" Scrooge seized the
spirit's cap and pulled it down over its head. The light still came from under
it to light up the floor.
Scrooge was back in his own bedroom. He threw himself
on his bed and fell into a deep sleep.
Chapter 3
The
second of the three spirits
Scrooge awoke and sat up in bed.
He had woken just in time, for, as he sat up,
he heard the church clock sound One. He looked round. He wanted to see the
spirit the moment it appeared. He didn't want to be taken by surprise.
There was no spirit to be seen.
He waited. Five minutes ... Ten minutes ...
Then, as he lay on his bed, he saw a red light coming from the next room.
He got up, put on his shoes and went to the
door to find out what it was.
The moment Scrooge's hand touched the door, a
strange voice called him by his name. He looked into the room. It was his own
room, but greatly changed. The walls were covered with green holly. There was a
big fire burning there, and on the floor was every kind of Christmas food - fat
birds ready for cooking, fruit, cakes, bottles of wine, sweets - everything.
"Come in," said the spirit,
"come in! You must get to know me better."
Scrooge went into the room and stood in front
of the spirit. He was not the unfeeling, hard Scrooge he had been in the past
but, although the spirit's eyes were clear and kind, he did not like to meet
them.
"I am the Ghost of Christmas Present," said
the spirit, "the spirit of this present Christmas. Look at me!"
Scrooge looked. He saw a fat and merry-looking person,
dressed in a long green coat. It had no shoes on its feet. There was
a crown made of holly on its head, with ice set in it
to make it shine. It had long brown hair hanging free on its neck.
"You've never seen anyone like me before,"
said the spirit.
"Never," said Scrooge.
The Ghost of Christmas Present stood up.
"Spirit," said Scrooge, "lead me where
you wish. Last night I was forced to go, but I learnt a lesson which is helping
me now. Tonight if you have anything to teach me, let me learn it."
"Give me your hand."
The fat birds, ready for cooking, the fruit and cakes
and sweets and wine, all disappeared. So did the room with its bright fire.
They were standing in a city street. It was Christmas morning. The people were
digging away the snow from the road in front of their houses. The sky was grey,
but there was cheerfulness everywhere. The people digging the snow were full
of joy, calling out to each other, and now and then throwing snowballs at each
other, and laughing when they were hit themselves.

The church bells began to ring and the people came
crowding through the streets in their best clothes and with happy faces.
Scrooge and the spirit travelled, unseen by
anyone, to the outer part of the town and came to the house of Bob Cratchit,
Scrooge's clerk. Inside the house, Mrs Cratchit, dressed in her best clothes,
Which she kept carefully from year to year, was laying the cloth on the table,
helped by Belinda, her daughter. Peter Cratchit, her son, was watching some
potatoes boiling in a pot, and two smaller' Cratchits, a boy and a girl, were dancing
round and round the table.
"Where's your father?" said Mrs
Cratchit, "and your brother, Tiny Tim?" Tiny Tim was their youngest
child, who was very small really tiny.
"And where's Martha? She wasn't so late last Christmas."
"Here I am, mother," said a girl,
appearing as she spoke. "Here's Martha."
"Here's Martha, mother!" cried the
two young Cratchits.
"My dear, how late you are!" said Mrs
Cratchit, kissing her eldest daughter and taking off her hat and coat.
"We had a great deal of work to finish in
the shop last night," answered the girl, "and we had to clear things
away this morning."
"Well, never mind. We're glad you're
here," said Mrs Cratchit. "Sit down by the fire and warm
yourself."
"Father's coming!" called the two
young Cratchits, who were still running about everywhere. "Hide, Martha,
hide, and give him
a surprise!"
So Martha hid herself. Then Bob Cratchit, her
father, came in. His clothes were brushed and mended to look their best. He
was carrying Tiny Tim on his back. Tiny Tim's
little legs were supported by bits of iron, because he could not walk without
them.
"Where's our Martha?" said Bob
Cratchit, looking round.
"Not coming," said Mrs Cratchit.
"Not coming!" said Bob Cratchit.
"Not coming on Christmas Day?"
Martha did not like to see him hurt, even for a
moment, so she came running out and threw herself into his arms, while the two
young Cratchits took Tiny Tim away to look at the dinner cooking on the kitchen
fire.
"How did Tiny Tim behave in church?"
"He was very good," said Bob
Cratchit. "I think he seems to be growing a little stronger."
Tiny Tim's brother and sister helped Tiny Tim
to his little seat beside the fire, while Bob Cratchit mixed wine and fruit to
make some wonderful drink which he set down by the fire to warm.
When the dinner was ready, Bob Cratchit put Tiny Tim
in his little chair at the corner of the table near him. Then Mrs Cratchit
brought in the goose, a wonderful bird, perfectly cooked. The family ate it up,
leaving a very small amount of meat on the last bone.
Then came the great moment. Mrs Cratchit
brought in the Christmas pudding - round, brown, full of fruit, with a little
piece of holly on the top. Bob Cratchit
said, "That's the best pudding you have ever made!" And all the
family agreed. It was really not a very
big pudding, but nobody said that - or even thought it: Mrs Cratchit had made
very little money work wonders, but nobody spoke about the cost.
After dinner, the cloth was taken off the
table. The family sat round the fire and enjoyed the hot drink that Bob
Cratchit had prepared.
Then Bob Cratchit stood up and said,
"Raise your glasses. A merry Christmas to us all, my dears! God bless
us!" And all the family said, "A merry Christmas to us all!"
"God bless us all, every one!" said Tiny
Tim, last of all. He sat very close to his father's side on his little chair,
and Bob Cratchit held his little hand in his as if he loved the child and
wanted to keep him by his side, but feared that he might be taken from him.
"Spirit," said Scrooge, "tell me
if Tiny Tim will live."
"I see an empty seat," answered the
ghost, "in the corner near the fire. If these shadows are not changed by
the Future, the child will die."
"No, no!" said Scrooge. "Oh, no,
kind spirit! Say that he will live!"
"If the shadows are not changed by the Future,
the Spirit of Next Christmas will not find him here. But does it matter? You
have said that there are too many people in the world."
Bob Cratchit stood up again, and he said, "Mr
Scrooge! Let's drink to the health of Mr
Scrooge!"
"I Wish he were here," said Mrs
Cratchit. "I'd tell him what I think of him. He wouldn't enjoy a Christmas
dinner after I'd said
what I think!"
"My dear," said Bob Cratchit.
"Remember the children! This is Christmas Day."
"It's only on Christmas Day," said
Mrs Cratchit, "that one would drink to the health of such a hateful, hard,
unfeeling man
as Mr Scrooge.
You know he is, Robert. Nobody
knows it better than you do."
"My dear," said Bob, "this is
Christmas Day."