Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Redemption
- Quotes
- 'Scrooge hung his head to hear
his own words spoken by the Spirit and was overcome with
penitence and grief'
- Noun 'grief' contrasts when Scrooge was
described as 'solitary as an oyster' and 'hard as
sharp as flint'- he once showed no emotions but
now he is overcome by grief
- First turning points, he shows some
remorse towards what he's done
- Stave 3, problem in Freytag's
pyramid, seems as if it is resolved,
we find out later it hasn't through
representation of Want and
Ignorance
- 'overcome' may suggest that the longer
someone acts as Scrooge, the harder the
emotions will hit back
- Consonance of 'h' sound may remind reader of constant
sighing. Relief that Scrooge is on the journey to
redemption
- 'His own heart laughed
and that was quite
enough for him'
- Christmas spirit has saved the day
- 'Nothing could be heartier...so did
Topper when he came...so did the plump sister when
she came...so did everyone when they came
- Reminder of Fezziwig in the previous stave when all the people came
- Italics of the pronouns may suggest that Scrooge has changed so much
that the reader, since A Christms Carol was written as a bed time story,
needs to change the tone of the words or that Scrooge has changed so
much that he now conveys emotion through the book but that could be a
reach
- 'He went to church and walked about te streets,
and watched...and patted..and questioned'
- verbs gradually get more socially integrating
- Polysyndeton conveys increase in Scrooge's excitement, almost 'like a child'
- Long compound sentence suggests he's on some type of
journey, journey to redemption, OR a childlike make
believe journey. Contrasts the whole rest of the book
- Key Examples
- Whole novella is an allegory for humans having a
chance to be kinder, better, more generous
humans
- At the start Scrooge rejects all Christmas
cheer from everyonehe meets and greets them
with 'Bah!' 'Humbug'
- Scrooge rejects all compassions that
Christmas offers showing how Scrooge
isolated himself from all people, and how
his compassion only resides towards
money
- Context
- More religious then than now, and Bibile talks about
being forgiven for sins, and being good, generous
human beings
- Dickens believed people should be more like he 'who made lame
beggars walk, and blind men see' all year long, as Jesus was
- Common Victorian saying of 'spare the rod and spoil the child'
was not very religious, Dickens thought people claimed to be
Christian but didn't actually put the values into practice