A Christmas Carol , livre ebook

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Classic novels
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Date de parution

01 septembre 2021

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0

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9781783227273

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English

ORIGINAL BY CHARLES DICKENS RETOLD BY PAULINE FRANCIS
First published in this edition 2011
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission of ReadZone Books Limited.
© copyright in the text 2005 © copyright in this edition ReadZone Books Ltd 2014
The right of the Author to be identified as the Author of this work had been asserted by the Author in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Every attempt has been made by the Publisher to secure appropriate permissions for material reproduced in this book. If there has been any oversight we will be happy to rectify the situation in future editions or reprints. Written submissions should be made to the Publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data (CIP) is available for this title.
ISBN 978-1-78322-727-3
Visit our website: www.readzonebooks.com
Chapter One   Humbug!
Chapter Two   Marley’s Ghost
Chapter Three   A Warning
Chapter Four   The First Ghost
Chapter Five   The Second Ghost
Chapter Six   Yes or No
Chapter Seven   The Last Ghost
Chapter Eight   The Dead Man
Chapter Nine   To the Churchyard
Chapter Ten   The End of It
Introduction
Charles Dickens was born in 1812, the second of eight children. When he was twelve years old, his father went to prison because he owed money. Charles went out to work to help his family. He never forgot this terrible time when he was poor, and later used his experiences in some of his stories.
In his twenties, Charles found work writing about London life for newspapers and magazines. Some of these articles were published as a book called Pickwick Papers . This is how Charles Dickens became famous at the age of twentyfour.
A Christmas Carol , published in 1843, was the first of his Christmas stories. It tells the story of a ghost called Marley who comes to haunt his old friend Scrooge on Christmas Eve. He does this to teach him a lesson – not to be so mean. The word ‘scrooge’ is still used by some people today to describe a mean person.
Charles Dickens wrote many famous novels, including Nicholas Nickleby, David Copperfield, Oliver Twist and Great Expectations . He died in 1870 at the age of fifty-eight and is buried in Westminster Abbey, London.
Chapter One
Humbug!
Marley was dead – to begin with. And when Marley died, Ebenezer Scrooge was the only friend at his funeral.
Scrooge was a mean man – a greedy, tight-fisted man. He was as hard and as sharp as flint and secretive and solitary. The cold inside him froze his old face, nipped his pointed nose and shrivelled his cheeks. It made his eyes red and his thin lips blue. Frost seemed to shine on his head and his eyebrows. He was as bitter as the coldest wind.
Nobody ever stopped Scrooge in the street to say a friendly word. No beggar ever begged from him. No child ever asked him what time it was. Did Scrooge care? No! He liked more than anything else to keep people at a distance. And at Christmas he did not thaw out, not even by one degree.
Once upon a time, on Christmas Eve, old Scrooge was busy counting money. It was cold, bleak, foggy weather. It was only just after three o’clock in the afternoon but it was dark already. The door of Scrooge’s office was open so that he could keep an eye on his clerk, Bob Cratchit. He was in a cold dark room copying letters by hand. His fire was so small that it looked like a single coal, but he could not make it larger because Scrooge kept the coal in his room. The clerk tried to warm himself in front of his candle.
“A Merry Christmas, uncle!” a cheerful voice cried. It was the voice of Scrooge’s nephew, Fred.
“Bah!” Scrooge replied. “Humbug!”
His nephew was so hot from walking in the fog and frost that his face glowed red and his eyes sparkled.
“I’m sure you don’t mean that, uncle!” he replied.
“I do,” Scrooge replied. “Merry Christmas, indeed! What right do you have to be merry? You’re poor. Bah! Humbug!”
“Don’t be cross, uncle!”
“What else do you expect me to be,” Scrooge said,
“when I live in a world full of fools? Merry Christmas! Christmas is just a time for paying bills when you haven’t got enough money. If I had my way, every idiot who says “Merry Christmas” would be boiled in his own pudding. You celebrate Christmas in your own way and let me celebrate it in mine.”
“But you don’t celebrate Christmas!” his nephew replied. “It is a good time. It is the only time in a long year when men and women think of other people.”

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