christmas carol

Cards (41)

  • “cold within him froze his old features“

    dickens uses the conceit of the cold to hold it parallel to scrooge’s cold attitude
    his internal apathy is so strong it alters his physical appearance
    makes scrooge successful in ostracising himself from society
    uncontrollable elements of nature have been intercepted and can’t affect scrooge as “even the external heat and cold had no influence”
  • “squeezing wrenching grasping scraping clutching covetous old sinner”

    7 adjectives to mirror 7 deadly sins
    rich are the real sinners as they scrutinise the poor for being lazy
    dickens criticises the rich in society and subtly criticises the poor through scrooge’s words
  • “no prisons or workhouses?“
    emblem of victorian soceity
    malthusian views don’t allow him to see the poor with any humanity or compassion
    sees the poor as numbers adding to the surplus population
    dickens did this to critique that social injustice is synonymous to the avaricious ways of the upper class
  • ”bob had none but fifteen bob a week himself”

    “bob” = slang for shillings
    constant reminder of how little he earns
    represent importance of money over lower classes that it can alter life or death
  • “Founder of the feast”
    Despit’s Scrooge’s mistreatment of Bob, Dickens exemplifies Bob’s patience and compassion
    Elevates Scrooge’s position and gives him importance
    Dickens does this to highlight the superiority of the upper class over the poor as even in his absence Bob respects him
  • “Oh a wonderful pudding!”

    exclamatory remark highlights Bob’s appreciation towards his family
    cratchits embody gratefulness
  • “strange figure like a child, yet like an old man”

    ghost of christmas past
    paradoxical depiction of an old man and a child
    juxtaposition is metaphorical for scrooge as he is old but vulnerable and associated to how he was as a child
    ghost aims to catalyse regression in scrooge
    ‘regression’ has negative connotations but in his case his past self is more desirable
  • “wore a tunic of purest white”

    christmas past
    ethereal description with celestial imagery of heaven and purity from sin
  • “wintry emblem, dress with summer flowers”

    metaphorical for scrooge as the winter conceit in act 1 highlights his inner miser
    ’summer flowers’ connotes ghost and beauty
    ghost of christmas past is a spiritual awakening
  • “bright clear jet of light”
    christmas past
    creates hope and brightness
    it is a function to brighten scrooge’s life with a moral awakening
  • “couldn’t hide the light“
    christmas past
    ghost is emblematic of hope and foreshadows how scrooge can’t hide from the redemption
    ghost aids his spiritual awakening
  • “one arm, one leg, now twenty, now a pair”
    ghost of christmas past’s metamorphosis can be symbolic of scrooge’s transformation
    each ghost physically changes as they foreshadow how it will bring not physical but moral change
  • Dickens uses the ghosts to show how all people, even misanthropic ones have an angelic tainted youth deeply represented
  • selfishness (scrooge)
    scrooge is the epitome of selfishness
    microcosm of selfish victorian upper class
    willingly neglect the lower class
  • selfishness (ghost of christmas present)
    pivotal moment in scrooge‘s redemption
    forces scrooge to face the consequences of his selfish ways
  • selfishness (start vs end)
    at the end scrooge is the antithesis of selfishness
    triggered morality + benevolence within him
  • scrooge is physically rich but in emotional poverty
  • solitary as an oyster
    isolated existence within society
    oyster=bottom of ocean isolated= scrooge is ostracised from society
    pearl=value= foreshadows scrooge’s redemption and stray from avariciousness
  • solitary as an oyster
    can be held parallel to the quote “solitary child neglected”
    scrooge’s negative description can be held synonymous to his isolated childhood and ‘solitary existence’
  • dickens intentions
    allegorical story
    didactic purposes
    convey message of consequences of greed
    critique upper class of their apathy and dehumanising laws towards lower class
  • dickens prompts the reader to check their morality and see if their views align with social injustice or reform
  • dickens emphasises that social change can be achieved through redemption and generosity
  • dickens implicitly critiques societal structures such as the 1834 poor law ironically created to target the laziness of the poor
  • key words
    avariciousness
    moral rebirth
    parsimonious
  • "you may be an undigested bit of beef"

    dismisses ghost of marley
    rejects redemption
    refuses to acknowledge the detrimental impacts of his parsimonious nature
    wants to remain isolated in his self destructive cocoon of sin
    shuns any idea of change
  • "yellow wolfish scowling"

    ignorance and want are allegorical characters to highlight the unjustified abuse of children in victorian society as a result of the upper class' callous attitudes
  • "yellow wolfish scowling"

    yellow=stark reminder of the physical sickness and malnutrition endured by the children
    consequence of social neglect and the rich's obliviousness to social injustice
  • "yellow wolfish scowling"

    encounter between scrooge and children illuminates that their poverty is as a result of the rich, who are epitomised by covetous characters such as the upperclass business men and scrooge himself
  • "yellow wolfish scowling"
    animalistic language
    feral portrayal strips the children of their humanity and reduces them to animals
  • "yellow wolfish scowling"

    dickens explores the extension of the ignorant wealthy through scrooge to show the only remedy for the societal ill is for them to acknowledge their role towards moral damage in soceity
  • "I shall live in the past, present and future"

    scrooge pleads for redemption and salvation after seeing the consequences to his parsimonious and avaricious nature
    solitary death reinforced his need to be cleansed and redeemed from greed
    ALTERNATIVLEY 3 aspects of holy trinity, reincarnation of God
    "within me" = moral teachings penetrated him deeply
    juxtaposition of past present future emulates scrooge's metamorphosis from avarice to a state of moral rebirth.
  • "quite like a baby, merry as a schoolboy"

    infantile language is symbolic to scrooge's now untainted light
    regained his youthful innocence and has gained spiritual renewal
    alternatively linked to Jesus' rebirth for salvation of sins and aid to society
  • "I wear the chains I forged in life"

    chains are interconnected, Marley communicates that his avarice and frugal nature are interconnected with the condemned eternal suffering and anguish
    chain is a conceit for the eternal consequences of his parsimonious nature
    personal pronoun 'I' implies Marley is aware of the sins he has committed and of the consequences to his selfish pursuits, now he ives in eternal spiritual poverty
  • "mankind was my business"

    economic language used by Marley works as a mouthpiece for dickens views
    critiques society's unhealthy obsession with material wealth+profit
    foreshadows scrooge's fate and the economic fate of his "cheap funeral" and "marketing the corpse"
  • "better do it and decrease surplus population"

    Christmas present repeats scrooge's words
    emphasises the neglect and ignorance of the upper class
    repeats to show the inhumanity of the rich's apathetic perspectives
    through scrooge's adoption of malthusian ideologies, poverty is dismissed as inevitable outcomes of the surplus population
  • "clerk"

    Bob Cratchit
    lack of identity
    dehumanisation experienced by working class
    removal of his name=stripped of individuality
    oppressed by scrooge, embodiment of greed
  • "shrouded in a deep black garment"
    symbol of death
    reminiscent of grim reaper, ambience of tragic end
    reminder of consequences of scrooge's immorality
    black=ominous image created by black juxtaposes the motif of light shown by past and present ghosts
    scrooge longed for a solitary life but now sees consequences of his solitary future
    immense power and entity needed to catalyse redemption within him
  • “are there no prisons? and the union workhouses?

    rhetorical question as if to ask why the poor should not be continually subject to exploitation
    ignorance shows how materialistic he is
  • redemption
    scrooge transmogrifies into a compassionate member of society as he experiences redemption
    as a microcosm for internal greed and avarice it exemplifies the power of redemption and its ability to catalyse social reform
  • solitary as an oyster
    psychological barrier between scrooge and the real world due to his neglect as a child causing him to isolate himself from society, his untainted, child like light remains under his hard shell like an oyster‘s pearl