Difference between revisions of "A Christmas Carol"
Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
Snowball II (talk | contribs) |
Snowball II (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
{{TB|123}} | {{TB|123}} | ||
{{TB|"[[Two Dozen and One Greyhounds]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Two Dozen and One Greyhounds]]"}} | ||
− | {{TB|[[Mr. Burns]] collapsing to the floor in anguish was referencing to how Ebenezer Scrooge collapsed upon the vision of his grave by [[the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come]] although Scrooge does not sear to no longer wear any clothing from an animal (that can do an amusing trick), but " | + | {{TB|[[Mr. Burns]] collapsing to the floor in anguish was referencing to how Ebenezer Scrooge collapsed upon the vision of his grave by [[the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come]] although Scrooge does not sear to no longer wear any clothing from an animal (that can do an amusing trick), but "to honor Christmas in my heart and keep it there the whole year through."}} |
{{TBT|[[File:Burns bah humbug.png|250px]]}} | {{TBT|[[File:Burns bah humbug.png|250px]]}} | ||
{{TB|[[Season 8|8]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 8|8]]}} |
Latest revision as of 15:10, August 22, 2024
A Christmas Carol is a famous 1843 novel by British author Charles Dickens.
The story is of a solitary and misanthropic miser in Victorian London named Ebenezer Scrooge who gets visited by three ghosts on the night before Christmas who warn him through visions of Christmases Past, Present and Yet to Come to change his ways. Scrooge has a change of heart over the night and by morning becomes a better person, even saving Tiny Tim, the very ill son of his clerk Bob Cratchit. It has been adapted to countless film and television specials over the decades and, inevitably, referenced on The Simpsons too in particular the 1951 film adaptation "Scrooge".
Many of the references are scenes with Mr. Burns parodying Ebenezer Scrooge.
References[edit]
Television episodes[edit]
|
Comics[edit]
|
External links[edit]