Difference between revisions of "A Christmas Carol"
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{{TB|"[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire]]"}} | ||
{{TB|Bart tells Homer that betting his money on the dog track "could be the miracle that saves the Simpsons' Christmas. If TV has taught me anything, it's that miracles always happen to poor kids at Christmas." One of the examples Bart gives is [[Tiny Tim]], a character from "A Christmas Carol", whom Homer apparently never heard of.}} | {{TB|Bart tells Homer that betting his money on the dog track "could be the miracle that saves the Simpsons' Christmas. If TV has taught me anything, it's that miracles always happen to poor kids at Christmas." One of the examples Bart gives is [[Tiny Tim]], a character from "A Christmas Carol", whom Homer apparently never heard of.}} | ||
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{{TB|[[Season 5|5]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 5|5]]}} | ||
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{{TB|"[[Burns' Heir]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Burns' Heir]]"}} | ||
{{TB|When Mr. Burns sees Bart outside his window he chooses him as his heir. Full of excitement Burns open his window and shouts at Bart: "You there, young lad. Which day is it today?" To which another child with a British accent says: "Today? Why today, it's Christmas sir?" This is a reference to a similar scene in "A Christmas Carol" where Ebenezer Scrooge asks a little child on the street the same question.}} | {{TB|When Mr. Burns sees Bart outside his window he chooses him as his heir. Full of excitement Burns open his window and shouts at Bart: "You there, young lad. Which day is it today?" To which another child with a British accent says: "Today? Why today, it's Christmas sir?" This is a reference to a similar scene in "A Christmas Carol" where Ebenezer Scrooge asks a little child on the street the same question.}} | ||
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{{TB|[[Season 8|8]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 8|8]]}} | ||
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{{TB|"[[Dumbbell Indemnity]]"}} | {{TB|"[[Dumbbell Indemnity]]"}} | ||
{{TB|Homer dresses up like Jacob Marley's ghost from "A Christmas Carol".}} | {{TB|Homer dresses up like Jacob Marley's ghost from "A Christmas Carol".}} | ||
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{{TB|[[Season 11|11]]}} | {{TB|[[Season 11|11]]}} | ||
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Revision as of 02:10, December 23, 2020
A Christmas Carol is a famous 1843 novel by British author Charles Dickens. It tells the story of how a rich, thrifty, heartless, old miser called Ebenezer Scrooge is visited by three ghosts during Christmas Eve who warn him to change his ways. Scrooge has a change of heart over the night and thus becomes a better person, even saving the handicapped little son Tiny Tim of his employee Bob Cratchit. It has been adapted to countless film and television special adaptations over the decades and, inevitably, referenced in "The Simpsons" too.
References
Television episodes
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Comic stories
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External links