“A Christmas Carol” notes
Stave 1
- stave: a stanza of a poem or song; here a section of Dickens’ “carol”
- ‘Change: the Exchange, the place where merchants, brokers, and bankers conduct their business
- executor, administrator, assign, residuary legatee: legal terms used in a will. Marley had left everything he owned to Scrooge, who handled all the business arrangements after Marley’s death.
- “came down”: slang for “made a gift or donation”
- comforter: a long scarf
- tacitly: without speaking
- beguiled: spent or whiled away
- lowering: dark and threatening
- fancy: imagination
- lumber room: storeroom
- hob: a small shelf at the back or side of a fireplace, used to keep a kettle or a saucepan warm
- cravat: a necktie, or a scarf resembling a necktie
- bowels: the intestines, which used to be regarded as the source of pity and mercy. When people said Marley had no bowels, they meant that he was cruel.
- ages…developed: In other words, heavenly spirits must work for countless years before the goodness that is possible in the world can come into being.
- of my procuring: that I got for you
- dull: gloomy
Stave 2
- organ of benevolence: the part of the head where the forehead meets the crown
- porter: dark brown beer
- forfeits: a game in which the players must forfeit, or give up, something if they lose
- negus: punch
- boiled: boiled beef
- “Sir Roger de Coverley”: a square-dance tune
- dowerless: without a dowry, the money and property that a woman formerly brought to her husband at marriage
Stave 3
- petrifaction: something petrified, or turning to stone. The hearth, or fireplace, is cold and hard because it has never known a generous fire.
- brawn: boar meat
- twelfth-cakes: fruitcakes made for Epiphany, or Twelfth Day, a holiday that occurs on January 6, twelve days after Christmas
- More…hundred: Since this story was written in 1843, the Ghost of Christmas Present would have more than eighteen hundred brothers.
- “bob”: slang for shilling, or shillings, a former British coin worth one twentieth of a pound
- twice-turned: remade twice so that worn parts would not show
- the baker’s: In the days when people of small means had fireplaces but no ovens, they would rent space in the local baker’s oven to roast poultry or large pieces of meat
- declension: sinking or falling off
- rampant: rearing up like a horse; here, high-spirited
- rallied Bob on his credulity: teased Bob for being so easily fooled by their joke
- ubiquitous: being everywhere at the same time
- ate: an alternate form of eaten, used in Great Britain
- livid: pale
- cloth: The pudding was wrapped in cloth and then boiled
- quartern: one fourth of a pint
- bedight: decorated
- Baleful: wretched
- tucker: a covering for the neck and shoulders, something like a large collar
- glee; catch: songs for three or more voices, unaccompanied by instruments
- feint: pretense
- precepts: rules of living
Stave 4
- offal: the waste parts of an animal that has been butchered for meat
- charwoman: a woman employed to clean a house or an office
- propitiation: ability to keep the peace
- “And he…them”: a quotation from Mark 9:36
Stave 5
- Laocoon: a character in a Greek myth who was strangled by sea serpents
- transports: feelings of great joy
- poulterer’s: shop where poultry is sold
- Walk-er!: a slang word used to express disbelief, equivalent to “You’re kidding!”
- half a crown: a coin equal to one eighth of a pound
- blithe: cheerful
- farthing: a former British coin worth one quarter of a penny
- munificence: great generosity. Scrooge prevents the gentleman from finishing the word.
- unanimity: agreement
- strait waistcoat: a straitjacket
- bishop: a hot drink made of spiced port wine
- total-abstinence principle: the giving up of “spirits” completely, usually alcoholic spirits, but here ghostly spirits