Bob Cratchet and Tiny Tim, the living symbols of the Christmas spirit. |
Note—A hardy perennial makes another appearance. Is it just me, or has our culture, led by Ebenezer
Trump elevated unrepentant Scrooge to icon and roll model?
To
borrow a phrase from one of the author’s other books, “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” I’m talking about the 1840’s in the early
years of what is now recalled, usually through rose colored glasses, as the Victorian
Era. Britain mastered the world
unchallenged since the final defeat
of Napoleon more than 20 years
before. It presided over a world girdling Empire whose riches and treasures were pouring into the
country. It was ground zero of the industrial
revolution, production of every sort
of goods was on the upswing, and innovation was making consumer goods cheaper.
The
already very wealthy got
wealthier. So did a limited number of clever
commoners. A middle class, serving the administrative
needs of government and corporations, was growing.
But
in the countryside tenant farmers were being evicted to make way for sheep to feed the humming textile mills. Skilled
weavers and other tradesmen
found themselves replaced by whirring machines and plunged into poverty. The displaced
made their way with little hope to the teaming
cities where they were crammed into unspeakable
slums. There was little chance for work for many of
them and they could be—and were—disposed
of immediately if they complained about
12 hour days or starvation wages. Many
turned desperately to begging, petty crime, and of course prostitution and vice of every sort. In London tens of thousands of children lived by their wits on the street.
An early Victorian London slum street with urchins. Note the cobblers--the lowest rung of tradesmen, displaying their wares in front of their basement shops. |
All
of these poor folks were considered dangerous, useless burdens who deserved
their fate because of a lack of moral fiber, natural indolence, and sloth. If the Crown
had given up on public hangings of 12 year old pickpockets, it was only because there
was a whole continent—Australia—to populate with transported prisoners. Otherwise the jails, workhouses, and cemeteries were filled.
Characteristic
of prevailing attitudes was what
would happen in Ireland just a
handful of years later. When the potato crop that fed the peasantry failed, British authorities
steadfastly refused relief while
hundreds of thousands died because charity would
“undermine the moral fiber of recipients and sap them of the will to
work.” Sound sort of familiar?
Anyway,
this is the England that a successful 31 year old writer named Charles Dickens found himself in. Once a child
of the comfortably middle class when his father failed and was jailed
for debt young Charles had been forced to leave his beloved studies and go to work in a shoe blacking factory at age 14.
The experience scarred him deeply
and affected his whole world view.
After
achieving fame and some level of modest comfort for his serialized novels, The Pickwick Papers and Oliver Twist, Dickens
decided to employ his fame to decry the
condition and treatment of the
poor, with which he was all too familiar.
After a tour of the Cornish mines
which employed child laborers in
dangerous conditions, and visiting a
London
Ragged School for street urchins, He planned to pen a pamphlet to be called An Appeal to the People of England, on behalf of the Poor Man’s Child. But finding an audience at a speech in Manchester covering the gist of his planned opus was bored and unresponsive, Dickens abruptly changed his plans. He would recast the appeal as a fictional story.
Charles Dickens in 1842 two years before A Christmas Carol. |
Thus A Christmas Carol was born. The author hastily scribbled the manuscript
in just six weeks, barely finishing in early December 1843 in time to rush the
manuscript to publication.
In setting his fictional appeal at Christmas, Dickens was being doubly counter-cultural. It seems that the holiday, once the happiest
of seasons, had fallen into
disrepute and was in actual danger
of being officially abolished from the
calendar—for the second time.
Christmastide had once been a popular
event, the official occasion of Christ’s supposed birthday folded into ancient
traditions from both Druidic and
Roman times marked with singing, dancing, general merry
making, drinking, and a sort of social-turn-the-tables in which masters and servants switched places
for at least a day. Oliver Cromwell and the scandalized
Puritans put an end to that. They outlawed
the holiday and imposed draconian
punishment on those discovered trying to celebrate, even in the privacy
of their own homes.
Although the Restoration
had put the religious celebration
back on the calendar, its association with Popery—it was after all Christ’s
Mass—discouraged celebration by
“loyal” Anglicans and most Protestant Dissenters. Over the years many customs vanished or were marginalized—the hanging of
greens, country dancing, and caroling. In fact the words for many traditional
carols were lost until a fad for
folklore began resurrecting them in the early 19th
Century. Christmas Day was generally
considered a work day. Factories and shops were mostly open, as were
government offices and courts.
After seeing some backsliding on Christmas
celebrations—Queen Victoria’s new
husband Albert, a Christmas loving German princeling, had erected a Christmas Tree at the Palace
and the fashionable were taking up the custom—conservative Protestant leaders energized
by new round popular evangelism and hostility to Catholics—were once again agitating
for the holiday to be officially abolished.
Dickens himself was an apostate Anglican with no interest in the religious observation of the Nativity,
which had caused the final alienation
of his tenuous ties to his family. He was at this point in his life associating and worshiping with Unitarians,
the most radical of all of the Dissenting sects who rejected both the divinity of Christ and miracles
like those in the Christmas story as distractions
from “pure” Christianity.
He was however, influenced by the stirrings of nostalgia for old time Christmas celebrations which seemed to him
to be both more egalitarian and warmer in
human sympathy. Christmas had played a key part in his first
success, The Pickwick Papers in which Mr. Wardle relates the tale of Gabriel Grub, a lonely
and mean-spirited sexton, who undergoes a Christmas conversion after being visited by goblins who show him the past and
future—obviously a seed for his new
story.
Without the trappings
of religious conversion on which to hang its tale of personal and social
redemption, Dickens fell back on elements
of spiritualism, which was widely popular, especially in the
middle classes at the time and even imbued with some pseudo scientific justification. Not that Dickens personally believed in communication
with the dead, but in the spirit of old time fairy tales, the kind with pointed
morals, he was quite willing to
employ them as literary devises.
A hand tinted illustration of the visit of Marley's Ghost first ediition. |
Thus was born a Christmas
ghost story, as frightening in
some parts as any fashionable gothic novel. But the terror
came less from the spirits—despite Jacob
Marley’s groans and chains and the fearsome, black, and silent Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come—the
familiar specter of Death as depicted since the time of the
great Plague—than from the poverty
of the Cratchits and their bleak
prospects, the alienation of family
and love, and the hardening of a miserly heart.
Redemption is accomplished when Scrooge is re-united with
his own humanity.
With, you should pardon the expression, great expectations, Dickens arranged to have an edition printed at his own expense taking as payment from the publisher, Chapman & Hall a percentage of sales rather than the customary lump sum. He commissioned original engravings for a fine
edition, including some tinted
with color, to be bound in leather and gilt edged. He quarreled
with the publisher and the book had to be re-made
with new end-papers and cover to meet Dickens’s exacting specifications, delaying
publication to within days of the holiday.
All of this cut deeply into
the profits the author hoped to earn
to support his young wife.
A Christmas Carol first edition. |
But the book was finally published on December 19, 1843 and
was an immediate popular and critical success. The first
edition sold out almost immediately and seven more were printed the same
year. Pirates soon had cheap paper
editions out, which the ever
vigilant Dickens fought with law suit after law suit. He authorized
a stage version which premiered in February 1844. Six other unauthorized productions were soon playing simultaneously in London.
America,
except for a handful of fans, was at first cool to the book, largely
because the young nation felt insulted by Dickens’s account of his first tour there a year before.
Christmas, especially in New
England, was still suspect in much of the country. But over the next decades that would
change. One after another Christmas
traditions were introduced and spread.
By the time Dickens returned for a post Civil War tour, both he and the book were beloved.
The little book was always Dickens’ personal favorite. He staged
his first public reading with it in 1858. Such readings were a principle income for him for the next decades. His last
reading, in ill health on March
15.1870 in London, was a final sharing of A
Christmas Carol. He died in the manor home in Kent which his literary
work had earned him, on June 8, 1870 at the age of only 58.
A Christmas Carol
has never gone out of print. It is perennially popular on both sides of
the Atlantic and was perhaps the main engine of Christmas becoming a popular, sentimental, and family holiday all
over the English speaking world.
The many faces of Scrouge--Albert Finney from the 1970 musical, egad Fred Flintstone, and Alister Sym in the definitive 1953 film. |
In addition to countless stage productions there have been at
least 28 film versions for theatrical or television release, the first in 1901. Alistair
Sym in the title role of Scrooge in 1951 is thought by many
to be the definitive version. Other notable versions include those with Reginald Owen in 1938, Albert Finney in a 1970 musical, George C. Scott and Patrick Stewart in two notable TV versions, and the horrible Disney disaster with Jim Carey in 2003.
There have been multiple musical
versions, three operas, notable radio broadcasts—especially one with Lionel Barrymore—and several animated versions. In addition there have been parodies, and just about every TV sitcom that lasts a few seasons
eventually does an episode in which
a principle character is visited by Christmas ghosts.
Yes, A Christmas Carol,
that odd seasonal tale devoid of
both traditional religion on one
hand and Santa Claus, magical animals, or
elves on the other, maintains a grip on our imagination after all these years. Maybe because it speaks to the real spirit of
the holiday better than any other tale.
Pat, at the top, you don't mean "perineal." I think autocorrect did you wrong, and was looking for "perennial." You'll want to fix that. Meanwhile, I hope you and yours are headed for a wonderful Christmas!
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