How many writers have been able to re-invent an entire holiday? Yet that is virtually what Dickens did with A Christmas Carol, crystallizing Victorian ideas of the holiday into vivid, memorable images which have colored the popular view of Christmas ever since.Dickens' friend and biographer, John...
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How many writers have been able to re-invent an entire holiday? Yet that is virtually what Dickens did with A Christmas Carol, crystallizing Victorian ideas of the holiday into vivid, memorable images which have colored the popular view of Christmas ever since.Dickens' friend and biographer, John Forster, told of its early sucess and impact when it was first published by Chapman & Hall on 19 December 1843:""Blessings on your kind heart!" wrote Jeffrey to the author of the Carol. "You should be happy yourself, for you may be sure you have done more good by this little publication, fostered more kindly feelings, and prompted more positive acts of beneficence, than can be traced to all the pulpits and confessionals in Christendom since Christmas 1842." "Who can listen," exclaimed Thackeray, "to objections regarding such a book as this? It seems to me a national benefit, and to every man or woman who reads it a personal kindness." Such praise expressed what men of genius felt and said; but the small volume had other tributes, less usual and not less genuine. There poured upon its author daily, all through that Christmas time, letters from complete strangers to him which I remember reading with a wonder of pleasure; not literary at all, but of the simplest domestic kind; of which the general burden was to tell him, amid many confidences about their homes, how the Carol had come to be read aloud there, and was to be kept upon a little shelf by itself, and was to do them all no end of good. Anything more to be said of it will not add much to this.There was indeed nobody that had not some interest in the message of the Christmas Carol. It told the selfish man to rid himself of selfishness; the just man to make himself generous; and the good-natured man to enlarge the sphere of his good nature. Its cheery voice of faith and hope, ringing from one end of the island to the other, carried pleasant warning alike to all, that if the duties of Christmas were wanting no good c
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