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A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens

A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

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Page 1: A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

A Christmas Carol

By Charles Dickens

Page 2: A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

Title

•Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together.

Page 3: A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

•A carol is a song of joy or praise.

• It is often intended to teach something; in this case, the praise of Christmas and how it is able to make people forget their troubles, and of Scrooge because he changes his ways.

Page 4: A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

Staves- part of the musical imagery, each chapter is a stave.

• A stave is a section of music where the mood is all the same.

• This is the case in A Christmas Carol, where each stave conveys a different mood and message.

Page 5: A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

Point of View

•Mainly in the third person, with a touch of first person narration.

Page 6: A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

PrefaceA preface is a brief introduction written by the author.

Page 7: A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

• I have endeavoured in this Ghostly little book, to raise the ghost of an Idea, which shall not put my readers out of humour with themselves, with each other, with the season, or with me. May it haunt their houses pleasantly, and no one wish to lay it down.

Their faithful Friend and Servant,

•C.D

•December 1843

Page 8: A Christmas Carol By Charles Dickens. Title Dickens saw his tale as one to be heard and shared, as Christmas carols spread joy and bring people together

•The preface helps set the tone of the work. By addressing the reader directly, Dickens employs an intimate, personal tone that is also used by the book’s narrator. He speaks to us as if we were his familiars. By calling the work a “ghostly little book” he implies that it will deal with ghosts and thus already intrigues the reader, making us curious to read further.