CHRISTMAS
CAROL
KNOWLEDGE
ORGANISER
WITH
KEY
QUOTATIONS
, A Christmas Carol
Plot Summary
Stave One
Fred visits Scrooge at work to invite him for Christmas dinner, but Scrooge refuses to go.
Scrooge is cruel to Bob, giving him only a small fire for warmth & only reluctantly giving him
Christmas o . He then refuses to give money to charity.
Marley’s Ghost appears in Scrooge’s home, wearing chains as punishment for his actions. He
warns Scrooge needs to change or su er a similar fate.
Stave Two
The Ghost of Christmas Past appears at Scrooge’s bed & shows him moments from his past:
A sad, lonely Christmas at school from when he was a child.
Happier Christmases with his sister & Mr Fezziwig, his former employer.
Belle breaking o her engagement to Scrooge.
Stave Three
The Ghost of Christmas Present appears & shows Scrooge:
The Cratchits’ Christmas – Scrooge learns that Tiny Tim will die if nothing changes.
People all over the world enjoying Christmas.
Fred’s House, where people play games & mock Scrooge.
Ignorance & Want, two children who represent flaws in society, and mindset of the upper class.
Stave Four
The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come visits Scrooge and shows him:
The joy and lack of respect characters show at an unknown man’s death – it turns out to be
Scrooge.
The Cratchits who are mourning Tiny Tim’s death.
Scrooge’s own isolated and uncared-for grave.
Scrooge vows to change his ways and his actions.
Stave Five
Scrooge is back in bed, and he has changed:
He donates to charity, raises Bob’s wages and is sociable.
He joins Fred for Christmas party, and is kind and joyful towards everyone.
He buys the Cratchits a turkey and befriends them.
Tiny Tim survives – it’s implied that Scrooge’s redemption saves his life. Scrooge respects Christmas.
, Background
& Context
Charles Dickens
Born in 1812 in Portsmouth.
Middle class, but experienced poverty when his father was arrested and put in prison for
debt.
Dickens had to give up his education to work in a factory.
As a young man, he worked as a clerk. He published A Christmas Carol in 1843.
The Industrial Revolution
Factory owners started using machinery.
People moved to cities to work in factories instead of working on farms.
Between 1800 & 1900, London’s population grew from 1 to 6 million.
Factory owners became wealthier, but their workers often lived in poverty.
The Industrial revolution created a large gap between the rich and poor, who were stuck in a
cycle.
Poverty in Victorian Britain
Overcrowding – Many people who moved to the city lived in overcrowded slums.
The slums were dirty & filled with hunger, disease and crime.
Su ering children – Children were often forced to work long hours in dangerous
conditions by factory owners.
Tiny Tim represents the su ering children. Ignorance & Want are children too – hints children
were particularly a ected by poverty.
Christmas
Christmas gained importance over the 1800s – by the end it was the most important
celebration of the year, with food, games & merriment.
As it was celebrated extravagantly by Queen Victoria, it gained immense popularity.
Associated with Christian values such as charity & goodwill to all.
Dickens wanted society to honour these values all year round, as an advocate for the
lower, working class.
, Scrooge
Greedy, Miserly, Solitary, Unsympathetic, Selfish, Isolated, Cold-hearted, Remorseful,
Regretful, Kind, Compassionate, Jolly, Merry, Warm-hearted
Stave One (Opening)
“a tight-fisted hand at the grindstone, Scrooge!”
“a squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous old sinner!”
“Hard and sharp as flint, from which no steel had struck out generous fire”
“carried his own low temperature always about with him”
“solitary as an oyster”
Stave One (With Fred)
“cold, bleak, biting weather; foggy withal”
“ ‘Bah!’ said Scrooge, ‘Humbug!’ ”
“every idiot who goes about with Merry Christmas on his lips, should be boiled with
his own pudding”
Stave One (Charity Men)
“Are there no prisons?” , “Are there no workhouses?”
“I can’t a ord to make idle people merry”
“If they would rather die, they had better do it and decrease the surplus population.”
Stave One (Carol Singer)
“Scrooge seized the ruler with such energy of action that the singer fled in terror”
Stave One (Bob Cratchit asks for a day o )
“A poor excuse for picking a man’s pocket every twenty fifth of December!”
Stave One (Jacob Marley’s Haunting)
“not a knocker, but Marley’s face”
“Darkness is cheap, and Scrooge liked it”
“double locked himself in, which was not his custom”
“the spectre’s voice disturbed the very marrow in his bones”
“Scrooge trembled more and more”
“began to quake exceedingly”