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00:02:02I am not in a habit of keeping Christmas, sir.
00:02:04Then why are you leaving so early?
00:02:05Because, sir, Christmas is a habit of keeping men from doing business.
00:02:08Come, it's the nature of things.
00:02:10That ants coil and grasshoppers sing and play, Mr. Scrooge.
00:02:13An ant is what it is and a grasshopper is what it is.
00:02:15And Christmas, sir, is a humbug.
00:02:17Good day.
00:02:17Oh, I am.
00:02:28Mr. Scrooge, sir.
00:02:29Who are you?
00:02:29Samuel Wilkins, sir.
00:02:32Oh, yes.
00:02:33You owe me a little matter of 20 odd pounds, I believe.
00:02:36Well, if you want to pay it, come to my place of business.
00:02:39I don't conduct my affairs in the teeth of inclement weather.
00:02:41I can't pay you, sir.
00:02:43I'm not surprised.
00:02:44Not unless you give me more time.
00:02:45Did I ask you for more time to lend you the money?
00:02:47Oh, no, sir.
00:02:48Then why should you ask me for more time to pay it back?
00:02:50I can't take my wife to a debtor's prison.
00:02:52Then leave it behind.
00:02:53Why should she go to a debtor's prison anyway?
00:02:55She didn't borrow the 20 pounds.
00:02:56You did.
00:02:58What has your wife got to do with it?
00:02:59For that matter, what have I got to do with it?
00:03:01Good afternoon.
00:03:01Mr. Scrooge, it's Christmas.
00:03:03Christmas has even less to do with it, my dear son,
00:03:04than your wife has or I have.
00:03:06You'd still owe me 20 pounds
00:03:07if you're not in the position to repay
00:03:09for it was a middle of a heat wave in August bank holiday.
00:03:10Good afternoon.
00:03:25Be awful, you.
00:03:27Good afternoon, Mr. Scrooge.
00:03:57I have no doubt that his generosity is well represented
00:03:59by his surviving partner.
00:04:02At this festive season of the year, Mr. Scrooge,
00:04:05it is more than usually desirable
00:04:07that we should make some slight provision
00:04:09for the poor and destitute.
00:04:12Are there no prisons?
00:04:14Plenty of prisons.
00:04:16And the union workhouses, are they still in operation?
00:04:18They are.
00:04:19I wish I could say they were not.
00:04:21And the treadmill and the poor law,
00:04:23they're still in full vigor, I presume.
00:04:25Both very busy, sir.
00:04:26Oh, from what you said at first,
00:04:28I was afraid that something had happened
00:04:29to stop them in their useful course.
00:04:31I'm very glad to hear it.
00:04:32I don't think you quite understand us, sir.
00:04:35A few of us are endeavoring to raise a fund
00:04:37to buy the poor some meat and drink
00:04:39and means of warmth.
00:04:40Why?
00:04:42Because it is at Christmas time
00:04:43that want is most keenly felt
00:04:45and abundance rejoices.
00:04:48What can I put you down for?
00:04:51Nothing.
00:04:52You wish to be anonymous.
00:04:54I wish to be left alone.
00:04:56Since you ask me what I wish, sir,
00:04:58that is my answer.
00:04:59I help to support the establishments I have mentioned.
00:05:01Those who are badly off must go there.
00:05:04Many can't go there.
00:05:05And some would rather die.
00:05:07If they would rather die,
00:05:09they'd better do it
00:05:10and decrease the surplus population.
00:05:13Besides, it's not my business.
00:05:15Isn't it, sir?
00:05:16No.
00:05:17It is enough for a man
00:05:18to understand his own business
00:05:19without interfering with other people's.
00:05:21Mine occupies me constantly.
00:05:23Good afternoon, gentlemen.
00:05:31Who's that?
00:05:33Your nephew, uncle.
00:05:36It's you, is it?
00:05:37Well, what do you want?
00:05:39Neither to borrow money
00:05:39or beg a mortgage, uncle,
00:05:41only to wish you a Merry Christmas.
00:05:42Keep Christmas in your own way
00:05:43and leave me to keep it in mine.
00:05:45But you don't keep it.
00:05:46Then let me leave it alone, then.
00:05:47Much good may do you to keep it.
00:05:49Not so good it has ever done you.
00:05:51It's certainly done me no harm.
00:05:52No, your wayward nature has done that.
00:05:55And your marriage?
00:05:56My marriage was the making of me.
00:05:58The ruin of you, you mean?
00:05:59Why don't you come and see for yourself
00:06:01if you won't take my word for it?
00:06:02Come and dine with us tomorrow.
00:06:05No, thank you.
00:06:06But why?
00:06:07Why?
00:06:08Why did you marry against my wishes?
00:06:10Because I fell in love.
00:06:11You fell in love
00:06:13with a woman as penniless as yourself.
00:06:15Oh, good evening, dine.
00:06:16We've never had any quarrel
00:06:18that I've ever been party to.
00:06:19I ask nothing of you.
00:06:20I came here in the spirit of right goodwill
00:06:22and I won't let you dampen it.
00:06:23So a Merry Christmas to you anyway, uncle.
00:06:25Good evening.
00:06:26And a Happy New Year.
00:06:27Good evening.
00:06:28Humbert!
00:06:36How is Mrs. Cratchit and all the small assorted Cratchits?
00:06:39Very well, sir, thank you.
00:06:40All champing at the bit for Christmas to begin, eh?
00:06:42Oh, yes, sir.
00:06:43All very eager.
00:06:45And the little lame boy, which one is he?
00:06:48Tim, sir.
00:06:48That's right.
00:06:49How is he?
00:06:50Oh, we're in high hopes.
00:06:51He's getting better, sir.
00:06:52Good.
00:06:53A Merry Christmas to you.
00:06:54Thank you, sir, and a Merry Christmas to you, sir, I'm sure.
00:07:24A Merry Christmas to you, sir.
00:07:54Come along, Tim, my dear.
00:08:03I've got the goose.
00:08:05Did you have a lovely time looking at all the wonderful things?
00:08:08Yes, thank you, ma.
00:08:09Did you get a big goose?
00:08:10Yes, the biggest goose you ever did see.
00:08:12As big as you and as fat as a beanstalk.
00:08:14Wait till your father sees it.
00:08:16His eyes will pop right out of his head.
00:08:17We'll get all about orange old Mr. Scrooge.
00:08:20You're not feeling too tired, are you, dear?
00:08:25Not a bit, Mama.
00:08:27Your father was here.
00:08:28He'd carry you home on his shoulder.
00:08:29Yes.
00:08:30I love having a ride on his shoulder.
00:08:32Please, my old Mr. Scrooge will keep him working in that cold little room just as late as he possibly can.
00:08:38Christmas Eve will know Christmas Eve, the old ogre.
00:08:40Christmas Eve will be here.
00:09:10You want the whole day off tomorrow, I suppose.
00:09:16If quite convenient, sir.
00:09:17Not convenient.
00:09:19And it's not fair.
00:09:22If I stopped your half a crown for it, you'd think yourself I'll use, wouldn't you, hmm?
00:09:25But you don't think me I'll use if I pay a day's wages for no work, do you, hmm?
00:09:29It is only once a year, sir.
00:09:31That's a poor excuse for picking a man's pocket every 25th of December.
00:09:34Yes, sir.
00:09:35I'm sure I'm very sorry, sir, to cause you such an inconvenience.
00:09:38It's the family more than me, sir.
00:09:40They've put their hearts into Christmas, as it were, sir.
00:09:42Yes, and put their hands into my pocket, as it were, sir.
00:09:45I suppose you'd better have the whole day.
00:09:47I'd be back all the earlier next morning.
00:09:49I will indeed, sir.
00:09:50Thank you, sir.
00:09:51It's more than generous of you, sir.
00:09:52Yes, I know it is.
00:09:53You don't have to tell me.
00:09:55A Merry Christmas, sir.
00:09:58A Merry Christmas, sir.
00:10:00You, a clerk, on 15 shillings a week with a wife and a family, talking about a Merry Christmas.
00:10:06I'll retire to Bedlam.
00:10:08A Merry Christmas, sir.
00:10:38Waiter.
00:10:39Yes.
00:10:41More bread.
00:10:42Take me extra, sir.
00:10:48No more bread.
00:10:49Yes.
00:11:08No more bread.
00:11:12Scrooge.
00:11:23Jacob, I...
00:11:30Scrooge.
00:11:35Oh, my God.
00:12:05Oh, my God.
00:12:35Oh, my God.
00:13:05Oh, my God.
00:13:35Oh, my God.
00:14:05Oh, my God.
00:14:35Oh, my God.
00:15:05Oh, my God.
00:15:06Oh, my God.
00:15:07Oh, my God.
00:15:09Oh.
00:15:10Oh, my God.
00:15:11Oh, my God.
00:15:12Oh, my God.
00:15:18Oh, my God.
00:15:20In that case, can you sit down?
00:15:28I can.
00:15:30Well, do it then.
00:15:44You don't believe in me.
00:15:46I don't.
00:15:48Why do you doubt your senses?
00:15:52Because a little thing affects them.
00:15:55A slight disorder of the stomach makes them cheat.
00:15:59You, you might be an undigested bit of beef.
00:16:03A piece of cheese.
00:16:06A fragment of an underdone potato.
00:16:10There's more of gravy than of grave in you.
00:16:13Whatever you are.
00:16:18Do you see that tooth break?
00:16:21I do.
00:16:27I'm not looking at it.
00:16:29But I see it notwithstanding.
00:16:35Oh.
00:16:35Well, then, I've just got to swallow this and I'll be tortured for the rest of my life by a legion of hobgoblins.
00:16:44All of my own creation.
00:16:47It's all humbug, I tell you.
00:16:48More mercy to the merciless mercy.
00:16:56Man of the worldly mind, do you believe in me or not?
00:17:00Yes, I do, I do, I do, I do.
00:17:02I must.
00:17:04But why do you walk the earth?
00:17:06And why do you come to me?
00:17:08It is required of every man that the spirit within him should walk abroad among his fellow men.
00:17:14If it goes not forth in life, it is condemned to do so after death.
00:17:18But it is doomed to wander through the world.
00:17:21Help!
00:17:22Come with me.
00:17:25And witness what it cannot share.
00:17:28But might have shared on earth.
00:17:30And turn to happiness.
00:17:32Why will you fit out?
00:17:35I wear the chain I forged in life.
00:17:37I made it link by link and yard by yard.
00:17:41I girded it on of my own free will and of my own free will.
00:17:48I wore it.
00:17:51You have my sympathy.
00:17:53Ah.
00:17:54You do not know the weight and length of strong chain you bear yourself.
00:18:00It was full as heavy and as long as this, seven Christmas eves ago, when you have labored on it since, sir, it is a ponderous chain.
00:18:12Mark me.
00:18:13In life my spirit never rode beyond the limits of our money-changing home.
00:18:18Now I am doomed to wander without rest or peace.
00:18:22Incessant torture of remorse.
00:18:27But it was only that you were a good man of business, Jacob.
00:18:31Business?
00:18:32Mankind was my business.
00:18:35Their common welfare was my business.
00:18:39And it is at this time of the rolling year I suffer most.
00:18:44Hear me.
00:18:45My time is nearly gone.
00:18:47I come tonight to warn you that you have yet a chance and hope of escaping my fate.
00:18:53A chance and hope of my procuring Ebenezer.
00:18:57Thank you, Jacob.
00:18:58You were always a good friend of mine.
00:19:02You will be visited by three spirits.
00:19:05What?
00:19:07Was that the chance of hope that you mentioned, Jacob?
00:19:12It was.
00:19:12Well, in that case, never mind.
00:19:16I think I'd rather not.
00:19:18Without their visits, you cannot hope to shun the path I tread.
00:19:24Expect the first when the bell tolls one.
00:19:35Look to see me no more.
00:19:42But look here, that you may remember, for your own sake, what has passed between us.
00:20:00Why do they lament?
00:20:02They seek to interfere for good in human manners and have lost their power forever.
00:20:16No!
00:20:19No!
00:20:34No!
00:20:37No!
00:20:39No!
00:20:39No!
00:20:40No!
00:20:41No!
00:20:42Oh, my God.
00:21:12Oh, my God.
00:21:42Oh, my God.
00:22:12Long past?
00:22:15No, your past.
00:22:20What is your business here with me?
00:22:23Your welfare.
00:22:27My welfare?
00:22:29Your reclamation, then.
00:22:31Take heed, rise, and walk with me.
00:22:37Through the window.
00:22:51Are you afraid?
00:22:52I am immortal and liable to fall.
00:23:01Bear but a touch of my hand, and you shall be upheld in more than this.
00:23:06I am immortal and liable to fall.
00:23:08I am immortal and liable to fall.
00:23:11I am immortal.
00:23:12I am immortal.
00:23:14I am immortal.
00:23:14You know this place.
00:23:29Know it.
00:23:31I was a boy here.
00:23:32They are but shades of the things that have been.
00:23:35They do not know we are here.
00:23:37Look.
00:23:39There's my old school.
00:23:41How lonely and deserted it looks.
00:23:43Not quite deserted.
00:23:45A solitary boy yourself Ebenezer forgotten by his friends is left there still.
00:23:52I knew.
00:24:13Ebenezer.
00:24:29Oh dear brother I have come to bring you home, home, home, home.
00:24:42Yes, home for good Lord, home forever and ever.
00:24:46Father is so much kinder than he used to be that home is like heaven.
00:24:51For you perhaps, but not for me.
00:24:55He doesn't know me nor even what I look like.
00:24:57You see him as I hardly know you now that you're quite a woman.
00:25:10Mama must have looked as you look now just before she died.
00:25:13Perhaps that is what has changed his mind towards you.
00:25:16He spoke to me so gently one night when I was going to bed that I wasn't afraid to ask him
00:25:22just once more if you might come home.
00:25:23And he said yes you should and sent me in a carriage to bring you and you're never to come back here anymore and you're never to be lonely again.
00:25:31Never to be lonely again.
00:25:33Never as long as I live.
00:25:35Well then you must live forever, Fan.
00:25:38Nobody else ever cared for me, nobody else ever will.
00:25:41You must live forever, Fan.
00:25:44Oh dear brother, what nonsense.
00:25:46Everyone loves you very much.
00:25:48You must forgive papa and forget the past.
00:25:51For our dearest mother's sake.
00:25:53Oh Fan.
00:25:56Bring down Master Scrooge's box.
00:26:03Our sister was always a delicate creature whom a breath might have withered but she had a large heart.
00:26:11She had.
00:26:13She died a married woman and had I think children.
00:26:16One child.
00:26:18True, your nephew.
00:26:20She died giving him life.
00:26:23As your mother died giving you life for which your father never forgave you.
00:26:28As if you were to blame.
00:26:30One child.
00:26:31One child.
00:26:33One child.
00:26:34Two child.
00:26:35Three child.
00:26:54You recall this, Snowdon.
00:26:56Recall it?
00:26:58my son. It's old Fezzerwick's. I was apprenticed here. Look, there's old Fezzerwick and Mrs.
00:27:17Fezzerwick, the top couple. Oh, was there ever a kinder man?
00:27:28And yet, what has this party cost him in your mortal money? Three or four pounds at most.
00:27:33Is that so much that he deserves your praise? Oh, but it's not that. The happiness he gave
00:27:38to us, his clerks and apprentices and everybody who knew him was as great as if it had cost
00:27:43a fortune. What's the matter? Nothing. Something, I think. No, no, no. Just that I'd like to have
00:27:52a word with my own clerk, Bob Tratchett, just now. That's all.
00:27:55Turn and see yourself in love, Ebenezer Scrooge. It's only a shilling ring, Alice, but one
00:28:04day it'll be a gold one. Oh, when I'm rich enough. Oh, it's a beautiful ring. Oh, but I mustn't
00:28:10accept it. Why not? Because it's not good enough for you. Oh, no, no. Because I'm not rich
00:28:16enough for you. Oh, of course not. You're still so young, you may have a change of heart
00:28:23one day. Dearest Alice, if ever I have a change of heart towards you, it'll be because my heart
00:28:29has ceased to beat. And it makes no difference that I'm poor. I love you because you're poor,
00:28:36not proud and foolish. Will you always feel like that? As long as I live. Longer. Forever
00:28:45and ever and ever. Then I accept your ring, Alice.
00:28:57Beneath her. God bless her.
00:29:00From now to eternity, we're two and as one. I've seen enough.
00:29:13Yet more wait. I won't look.
00:29:15You shall. Now see yourself in business, Ebenezer.
00:29:19Come, come, Mr. Fizzy. We're good friends, I think. Besides good men of business, we're
00:29:23men of vision and progress. Why don't you sell out while they're going as good? You'll never
00:29:28get a better offer. This is the age of the machine and the factory and the vested interests.
00:29:33We small traders are old history, Mr. Fizzy. We. Dodos. Yes, sir, I dare say we are. And
00:29:39the offer is a very large one, I have to admit. But it's not just for money alone that one
00:29:44spends a lifetime building up a business, Mr. Jorkey. Well, if it isn't, I'd like you
00:29:49to tell me what you do spend a lifetime building up a business for. It's to preserve a way of
00:29:54life that one knew and loved. No, I can't see my way to selling out to the new vested
00:29:59interests, Mr. Jorkey. I'll have to be loyal to the old ways and die out with them if needs
00:30:06must. Well, you know what they say about time and tide, Mr. Fizzywig. They wait for no one.
00:30:12There's more in life than money, sir. Oh, excuse me, Mr. Fizzywig, sir. Yes, yes, my boy. The
00:30:19foreman would appreciate a word with you if you can spare the time, sir. Yes, yes, of course.
00:30:23Well, excuse me a moment. They can't teach an old dog new tricks, can you, Mr. Scrooge? Nor
00:30:40teach the lepers to change its spots. Well, I... I think I know what Mr. Fizzywig means,
00:30:45though, sir. Oh, so you hate progress and money, too, do you? No, I don't hate them, sir, but,
00:30:51well, perhaps the machines aren't such a good thing for mankind after all. Sage and onions,
00:30:56my dear fellow. Ha, gammon and spinach. Why, suppose I told you you could get twice the salary
00:31:02old Fizzywig can afford to pay you and advancement he can't afford to offer you as a clerk in a new
00:31:08company. What would you say to that, eh? Well, I... I'd still say money wasn't everything, sir. Oh, well,
00:31:16if it ain't, I don't know what is. Come and see me someday anyway, young fellow. You're smart and
00:31:21you're no fool. That's the kind of buck they're looking for these days.
00:31:26No, spirit. Not here. Yes. Here.
00:31:43Then, it's me, your brother. Do you know me?
00:31:50Lebanese. They sent for you. Promise me.
00:32:06Promise you what, Fenn? I'll promise you anything, dearest. Only that there isn't going to be any need.
00:32:12You're going to get well again, Fenn. No. You are. You are. You are. Dear God, you must.
00:32:24Fenn, you... you can't die. Fenn, you mustn't die. You're going to get well again, Fenn. Fenn,
00:32:34you're going to get well again.
00:32:42Fenn. Fenn, Fenn. Fenn, you're going to get well again.
00:32:54How could you have brought me here?
00:33:12Have you no mercy, no pity?
00:33:14Ebenezer.
00:33:16Brother.
00:33:19Ebenezer.
00:33:20Yeah, promise me you'll take care of my boy.
00:33:30Promise me you'll take care of my...
00:33:50...for you heard her.
00:33:54Forgive me, Fenn.
00:33:56Forgive me.
00:33:58Forgive me, Fenn.
00:34:00Forgive me, Fenn.
00:34:02Forgive me, Fenn.
00:34:20Well, there you are, me Buck.
00:34:25That's where you start.
00:34:26And you can work your way on up as high as the dome of St. Paul's Cathedral if you've a mind to do so.
00:34:30Control the cash box and you control the world.
00:34:34By the way, how did old Fezziwig take it when you said you were leaving him?
00:34:38You wish me luck, sir.
00:34:40No hard feelings, eh?
00:34:42Starting with a clean slate.
00:34:44Good.
00:34:45And now let me introduce you to your fellow clerk, Mr. Marley.
00:34:49Just a moment, please.
00:34:52Mr. Ebenezer Scrooge, the new clerk.
00:34:55Mr. Jacob Marley, our wizard of the accounts.
00:34:58Your servant, Mr. Marley.
00:34:59Your servant, Mr. Scrooge.
00:35:01I'm sure you two gentlemen will get along famously.
00:35:03I'm sure we shall, Mr. Jorkins, sir.
00:35:05Yes.
00:35:06Well, I'll leave you to it.
00:35:12The place no doubt seems new and strange to you.
00:35:14Somewhat.
00:35:16The world is on the verge of new and great changes, Mr. Scrooge.
00:35:19Some of them, if necessity, will be violent.
00:35:22Do you agree?
00:35:23Oh, I think the world's becoming a very hard and cruel place, Mr. Marley.
00:35:27One must steal oneself to survive it.
00:35:30Not be crushed under with the weak and the infirm.
00:35:33I think we have many things in common, Mr. Scrooge.
00:35:36I hope so, Mr. Marley.
00:36:00Oh, excuse me, Mr. Scrooge, sir.
00:36:03Yes?
00:36:04Pardon the liberty, but do you know if I'm to have kept on here, sir?
00:36:06What's your present salary?
00:36:07Five shillings a week, sir.
00:36:08You can stay for four shillings a week.
00:36:09Well, yes, sir.
00:36:10Thank you, sir.
00:36:11Isn't that old fessy week?
00:36:12Thank you, sir.
00:36:13Oh, excuse me, Mr. Scrooge, sir.
00:36:14Yes?
00:36:15Pardon the liberty, but do you know if I'm to have kept on here, sir?
00:36:18What's your present salary?
00:36:19Five shillings a week, sir.
00:36:20You can stay for four shillings a week.
00:36:21Well, yes, sir.
00:36:22Thank you, sir.
00:36:23Isn't that old fessy week?
00:36:24Oh, yes, sir.
00:36:25Thank you, sir.
00:36:26Isn't that old fessy week?
00:36:54Alice.
00:36:57The same Alice you swore to love to all eternity, Ebenezer.
00:37:03She is not changed by the harshness of the world, but you are.
00:37:09Then you no longer love me.
00:37:13You no longer love me.
00:37:15When have I ever said that?
00:37:16In words, never.
00:37:18Well, in what, then?
00:37:19In the way you have changed.
00:37:21But how have I changed towards you?
00:37:23By changing towards the world.
00:37:25Is it such a terrible thing for a man to struggle with something better than he is?
00:37:29Another idol has replaced me in your heart.
00:37:33A golden idol.
00:37:34It's singular.
00:37:35The world that can be so brutally cruel to the poor professes to condemn the pursuit of wealth in the same breath.
00:37:39You fear the world too much.
00:37:41With reason.
00:37:42But I am not changed towards you.
00:37:45Aren't you?
00:37:51Our promise is an old one.
00:37:53It was made when we were both poor and content to be so.
00:37:58If you had never made that promise, tell me, would you seek me out and try to win me now?
00:38:06Of course I would.
00:38:07No.
00:38:10If you were free today, would you choose a direless girl with neither wealth nor social standing?
00:38:15You who now weigh everything by gain?
00:38:18It would bring you nothing but repentance and regret.
00:38:24That is why I release you.
00:38:27You know I am right then.
00:38:32I must bow to your conviction that you are.
00:38:38May you be happy in the life you have chosen.
00:38:41I shall be it.
00:38:46Goodbye.
00:38:47Come on.
00:38:48Come on.
00:39:06Show me no more.
00:39:07But I told you, these were but shadows of the things that have been.
00:39:12That they are what they are, do not blame me.
00:39:14Take me away.
00:39:16Very well, but we have not done yet, Ebenezer Scrooge.
00:39:20We do but turn another page.
00:39:31And as your business prospered, Ebenezer Scrooge,
00:39:35a golden idol took possession of your heart, as Alice said it would.
00:39:42May we hear those figures, Mr. Snedgrid, at your pleasure?
00:39:46Certainly, Mr. Groeper.
00:39:47Well, gentlemen, after 17 years of existence,
00:39:50the Amalgamated Mercantile Society's books show the startling figures
00:39:53of a liability of 3,200 pounds, 8 shillings and tempence,
00:39:57and a total asset of 11 pounds, 8 shillings and tempence.
00:40:00Well, at least the tempences cancel each other out.
00:40:06How much of this is the company's capital?
00:40:09All of it, Mr. Rosebud.
00:40:10In short, sir, you're not only a bankrupt,
00:40:13you're an embezzler of the company's funds.
00:40:17I also beat my wife and skewer innocent babies when in my cups.
00:40:21Take a very cool attitude, if I may say so, sir.
00:40:24So do Mr. Scrooge and Mr. Marley.
00:40:26They're not facing prosecution for a capital offence.
00:40:28Oh, but, gentlemen, it could have been any one of you.
00:40:31We're all cutthroats under this fancy linen, Mr. Snedrick.
00:40:34I must ask you to speak for yourself, Mr. Jorking.
00:40:36What would you gauge to prosecute me?
00:40:39All you'd get out of it is about 11 pounds on.
00:40:41And to pack me off to Botany Bay would be poor compensation
00:40:44for the panic that would arise among the shareholders.
00:40:47Panic, sir?
00:40:48Yes, panic.
00:40:50Would any of you gentlemen care to deny
00:40:51that if this juicy little scandal leaked out now,
00:40:54the annual shareholders' meeting would resemble
00:40:57an orchestra of scorched cats.
00:41:00Result?
00:41:02Bankruptcy all round.
00:41:03Strike that speech out of the minutes.
00:41:05Yes, sir.
00:41:06Mr. Jorking doesn't exaggerate the imprudence
00:41:09of allowing his misdemeanors to be made public.
00:41:13Are you in sympathy with Mr. Jorking by any chance, Mr. Scrooge?
00:41:16Not, I confess, with his methods.
00:41:18But Mr. Marley and I have a proposition to make
00:41:20to the representatives of the company,
00:41:22which might solve some of the difficulties
00:41:24to our general advantage.
00:41:25The devil you have?
00:41:27You want to watch these two fellas, you know.
00:41:29They'd skin Jack catch alive
00:41:30and he'd never know they'd done it.
00:41:32Can we hear the proposition?
00:41:35It's my description.
00:41:38Mr. Marley and myself
00:41:39are prepared to make good
00:41:41out of our own private resources,
00:41:44a sum of money appropriated by Mr. Jorking.
00:41:47Reprieved.
00:41:50Reprieved.
00:41:51Curfew shall not bring to light, Mr. Snedrick.
00:41:53Order, order.
00:41:54In return,
00:41:56we wish to be allowed the option
00:41:57of buying up further shares in the company
00:41:59to a maximum of 51% of the total.
00:42:04In short, gentlemen,
00:42:05if you wish to save the fair name of the company
00:42:08by accepting their generous offer,
00:42:10they become the company.
00:42:12Never, never.
00:42:13Out of the question.
00:42:14Never.
00:42:14Out of the question and also out of order, Mr. Scrooge.
00:42:18Out of the question.
00:42:48Pardon me.
00:42:54If you can find the grace to,
00:42:57I've just come from Mr. Marley's
00:42:59with a message for Mr. Scrooge.
00:43:01Can I give it to him?
00:43:02Well, please, your great kind self, dear.
00:43:05I'm to say
00:43:06that Mr. Marley ain't expected
00:43:08to live through the night
00:43:10and that if Mr. Scrooge
00:43:11wants to take his leave of him,
00:43:13he should nick along smartly
00:43:15or there won't be no Mr. Marley
00:43:16to take leave of
00:43:17as we know the use of the word.
00:43:21He's breathing very queer
00:43:23when he does breathe at all.
00:43:30Excuse me, Mr. Scrooge.
00:43:31I'm so busy.
00:43:32It's about Mr. Marley.
00:43:33He's dying, sir.
00:43:34Well, what can I do about it?
00:43:36If he's dying, he's dying.
00:43:37Well, the message was for you
00:43:38to go at once.
00:43:40It is now quarter to five.
00:43:41The business of the office
00:43:42is not yet finished.
00:43:43I shall go when the office is closed
00:43:44at seven o'clock.
00:43:46Yes.
00:43:51He'll come at seven.
00:43:54I'll try and get Mr. Marley
00:43:56to hold out till then, I'm sure.
00:43:59Much obliged.
00:44:00Good night to you.
00:44:01And a merry Christmas
00:44:08if you don't care
00:44:09to keep him with the situation.
00:44:12The same to you.
00:44:31I hope you'll find
00:44:54Mr. Marley well, sir.
00:44:55I should think
00:44:56that's highly unlikely.
00:44:57Yes, I suppose so, sir.
00:44:59It seems hard to think
00:45:01of a place without him, sir.
00:45:02Why should it be any more odd
00:45:04than it was with him?
00:45:05We've all got to die, Cratchit.
00:45:09I suppose you'll be wanting
00:45:10the whole day off tomorrow,
00:45:11as usual.
00:45:12If quite convenient, sir.
00:45:14Every Christmas,
00:45:15you say the same thing.
00:45:17And every Christmas,
00:45:18it's just as inconvenient
00:45:19as it was the Christmas before.
00:45:20Good night.
00:45:22Good night.
00:45:29Who's that, the doctor?
00:45:53No, sir.
00:45:54The undertaker.
00:45:55You don't believe
00:45:58in letting the grass
00:45:58grow under your feet, do you?
00:46:00Ours is a highly competitive
00:46:01profession, sir.
00:46:04Is it dead yet?
00:46:06I'll have another look
00:46:06if you like.
00:46:07No, don't bother.
00:46:09I'll see for myself.
00:46:10I'll see for myself.
00:46:40Last rites and all that.
00:46:45There's nothing I can do.
00:46:52Oh?
00:46:55What, particularly?
00:47:01While there's still time.
00:47:06Time?
00:47:07Time for what?
00:47:08What?
00:47:12We've been wrong.
00:47:14Huh?
00:47:16Wrong.
00:47:17Wrong?
00:47:19Oh.
00:47:20Well, we can't be right
00:47:22all the time.
00:47:23Nobody's perfect.
00:47:25We've been no worse
00:47:26than the next man.
00:47:29Or better
00:47:29if it comes to that.
00:47:31You mustn't reproach yourself,
00:47:33Jacob.
00:47:34We are wrong.
00:47:35What?
00:47:36You'll save
00:47:41yourself.
00:47:44What?
00:47:45Save myself?
00:47:47Save myself from what?
00:47:50Hmm?
00:47:53Speak up.
00:47:54You say date?
00:48:18Yes.
00:48:19Just like you say it.
00:48:23I always know.
00:48:24I always know.
00:48:24One shadow more.
00:48:43No.
00:48:45No more.
00:48:46I cannot bear it.
00:48:48Jacob Marley worked at your side
00:48:52for 18 years.
00:48:54He was the only friend you ever had.
00:48:57But what did you feel
00:48:58when you signed the register
00:48:59of his burial
00:49:00and took his money,
00:49:02his house,
00:49:03and his few mean sticks
00:49:05of furniture?
00:49:05Do you feel a little pity
00:49:08for him?
00:49:09Look at your face,
00:49:11Elisa.
00:49:12A face of a wrenching,
00:49:14grasping,
00:49:16scraping,
00:49:17covetous old sinner.
00:49:19No.
00:49:20No.
00:49:22No.
00:49:23No.
00:49:24No.
00:49:24No.
00:49:25No.
00:49:27No.
00:49:28No.
00:49:29No.
00:49:30No.
00:49:31No.
00:49:32No.
00:49:33No.
00:49:33No.
00:49:34No.
00:49:34No.
00:50:02Come in.
00:50:03I'm in there, Minas Rouge.
00:50:06I await you.
00:50:07Yes, I am.
00:50:09I'm coming.
00:50:10Come in.
00:50:12Come in.
00:50:13I'm coming.
00:50:33Come in, come in.
00:50:45And the winner's a man.
00:50:48I am the spirit of Christmas present.
00:50:51Look upon me.
00:50:52You've never seen the like of me before, have you?
00:50:55Never.
00:50:57And I wish the pleasure had been indefinitely postponed.
00:51:01So, is your heart still unmoved towards us then?
00:51:05I'm too old.
00:51:06I'm beyond hope.
00:51:08Go and redeem some younger, more promising creature.
00:51:12Leave me to keep Christmas in my own way.
00:51:16Mortal, we spirits of Christmas do not live only one day of our year.
00:51:22We live the whole 365.
00:51:25So is it true of the child born in Bethlehem.
00:51:27He does not live in men's hearts only one day of the year, but in all the days of the year.
00:51:32You have chosen not to seek him in your heart.
00:51:35Therefore, you shall come with me and seek him in the hearts of men of good will.
00:51:41Come.
00:51:42Touch my robe.
00:51:43What place is this?
00:52:03A place where miners live, who labor in the bowels of the earth.
00:52:06But they know me.
00:52:09Come.
00:52:09Christ is born in Bethlehem.
00:52:27All the herald angels sing.
00:52:32Glory to the new born King.
00:52:36Why, it's Cratchit.
00:52:46It's Barbara, Cratchit.
00:52:54He's coming, Mother.
00:52:55Father's here with Tiny Tim.
00:52:57Tim, you hide.
00:52:59And we'll tell you've been held up and who knows when you'll be here.
00:53:02Yes, you are not.
00:53:03Oh, Cratchit, where?
00:53:06Behind this gallery door, quickly, Mother.
00:53:15What?
00:53:21A merry Christmas.
00:53:23Why, where's our Martha?
00:53:32Oh, she's not coming.
00:53:34Not coming?
00:53:35Not coming on Christmas Day?
00:53:37Yes, I am, Father.
00:53:40I can't bear to let them tease you.
00:53:42Why, bless your heart.
00:53:44It never would have been Christmas if they'd kept you late.
00:53:46Is the pudding still singing in the copper, Peter?
00:53:49Yes, come to hear it.
00:53:50You come too, Mary and Belinda.
00:53:54You come along as well, Martha.
00:53:55Come to hear the pudding singing in the copper.
00:53:56I'll come in a minute.
00:53:57All right.
00:53:58Sit you down before the fire and have a nice warm.
00:54:01The Lord bless you.
00:54:02We had such a deal of work to finish up last night, but I never did think I'd get away.
00:54:06We had to clear away this morning.
00:54:08And then I ran all the way so as to be here in time.
00:54:10How did little Tim behave in church?
00:54:13As good as gold and better.
00:54:15Somehow he gets thoughtful sitting by himself so much and thinks the strangest things you ever heard.
00:54:20He told me he wasn't going to feel shy if people looked at him because he was a cripple,
00:54:25as it might be pleasant to them, being in church, to remember upon Christmas Day
00:54:29who made lame beggars walk and blind men see.
00:54:33He's growing strong and hearty, though, Martha, my dear.
00:54:36Isn't he, my love?
00:54:40Spirit, tell me where, where tiny Tim will live.
00:54:50I see a vacant seat in the poor chimney corner and a crutch without an owner carefully preserved.
00:54:56If these shadows remain unaltered by the future, another of my race shall find him now.
00:55:02Oh, no.
00:55:03No.
00:55:05Tiny Spirit, say that he will be spared.
00:55:09Why?
00:55:10If he'd be like to die, he'd better do it and decrease the surplus population.
00:55:21Well, my little cock sparrow, here's your own stool by the fire all ready for you.
00:55:27There's such a goose, Martha.
00:55:29I'm sure of it.
00:55:31And a pudding.
00:55:32Oh, the pudding.
00:55:33I shan't be easy till it's eaten.
00:55:36I confess I have my doubts about the quantity of flour.
00:55:39It'll be a perfect pudding, my love.
00:55:41A perfect pudding.
00:55:43Won't it, Martha, my dear?
00:55:45Hey, Tim?
00:55:46It'll be the finest pudding in the whole of London this Christmas.
00:55:49And the goose will be the finest goose.
00:55:51And ours will be the finest Christmas.
00:55:53Here's the punch, all steaming hot.
00:55:58Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:55:59Now, now, don't do it.
00:56:00Take your turn, one and all, if you please.
00:56:03There's enough for one toast now and another after that.
00:56:05Good there.
00:56:06Bravo.
00:56:07There's bounty for you.
00:56:08I declare I'd like to know how many families of our acquaintance could boast two rounds of the best gin punch.
00:56:13No!
00:56:15Now, has everybody got his drink?
00:56:17Yes.
00:56:18Good.
00:56:18But before I give the toast, I have a piece of momentous information for all, and Master Peter in particular.
00:56:25Master Peter?
00:56:26Why, that's you, Peter.
00:56:28What is it, Father?
00:56:29I love your parents.
00:56:30Master Peter, now grown to full estate and dignity, a son of the house,
00:56:34and looking every inch the grandfellow he is in one of my own collars.
00:56:40I have waited for this great moment to advise him that I have my eye on a situation for him
00:56:45which will bring in, if obtained, full five and sixpence weekly.
00:56:49Oh, Fluffy, you'll be quite independent gentlemen now, Peter.
00:56:53What next, I wonder?
00:56:55Then a toast, my love, my dearies, to our Merry Christmas.
00:57:00God bless us.
00:57:01God bless us.
00:57:02God bless us.
00:57:04Everyone.
00:57:08I give you Mr. Scrooge, the founder of the feast.
00:57:12Oh, look!
00:57:13I wish I had him here now.
00:57:16I'd give him a piece of my mind to feast himself upon.
00:57:19My dear children, Christmas Day.
00:57:21Could only be on Christmas Day that I would drink the health of such a hard, stingy, unfeeling man as Mr. Scrooge.
00:57:27You know he is, Robert.
00:57:28Nobody knows it better than you do, poor fellow.
00:57:30My dear, Christmas Day.
00:57:35I'll drink his health for your sake and the days, not for his.
00:57:39Long life to him.
00:57:41Merry Christmas and a happy new year.
00:57:43He'll be very happy and very merry, no doubt.
00:57:45He said that Christmas was humbug and he believed it, too.
00:57:58I told you so.
00:58:00Well, a merry Christmas and a happy new year to the poor old man.
00:58:03He wouldn't let me wish it to him personally, but here it is nevertheless.
00:58:06Uncle Scrooge.
00:58:07Oh!
00:58:07Well, I don't know that our drinking to him will do him much good.
00:58:12Nor do I.
00:58:12I hate it.
00:58:13Oh, I forbid it.
00:58:14I'm sorry for him.
00:58:15I couldn't feel angry with him if I tried.
00:58:17Who suffers worse from his humours?
00:58:19Himself, always.
00:58:20Look at the way he's taken it into his head to disown us without a shilling and won't even come to dinner with us.
00:58:25And what's the consequence?
00:58:26He's only cheated himself out of a highly indigestible dinner.
00:58:29It was a wonderful dinner.
00:58:31Yes, it was a wonderful dinner.
00:58:33Well, I'm very glad you think so, miss, because I personally haven't very much faith in these newlywed housekeepers.
00:58:39Have you, Tupper?
00:58:40Alas, as a bachelor, I'm a wretched outcast with no right to express an opinion on such a tender and delicate subject.
00:58:48Have I?
00:58:49Dear, distant, unmovable, Miss Flora.
00:58:53Now, you really are quite incorrigible, Mr. Tupper.
00:58:57Quite beyond hope.
00:58:59I am become a salding brass or a tinkling cymbal.
00:59:22And though I have the gift of prophecy and understand all mysteries and all knowledge,
00:59:27And though I have all faith so that I could remove mountains and have not charity, I am nothing.
00:59:33Do you feel more rested now, my dear?
00:59:36I do.
00:59:37Bless your dear, gentle heart.
00:59:41Alice.
00:59:41Do you know me, darling?
00:59:43I never thought there was anyone like you left in the whole wide world.
00:59:49Cut me throat, rip me liver from telling a lie.
00:59:52This is the happiest Christmas I ever had.
01:00:03Alice.
01:00:04Alice.
01:00:06Alice.
01:00:12Spirit, are these people real or are they shadows?
01:00:14They're real.
01:00:16We're the shadows.
01:00:17Both of us.
01:00:18Did you not cut yourself off from your fellow beings when you lost the love of that gentle creature?
01:00:24Where are you taking me now?
01:00:36My time with you, Ebenezer, is almost done.
01:00:40Will you profit by what I have shown you of the good in most men's hearts?
01:00:43I don't know.
01:00:46How can I promise?
01:00:48If it's too hard a lesson for you to learn, then learn this lesson.
01:00:58Spirit, are these yours?
01:01:01They are man's.
01:01:02They cling to me for protection from their fetters.
01:01:06This boy is ignorance.
01:01:08This girl is want.
01:01:09Beware them both.
01:01:11But most of all, beware this boy.
01:01:15But have they no refuge?
01:01:16No resource?
01:01:18Are there no prisons?
01:01:19Are there no workhouses?
01:01:22Are there no prisons?
01:01:24Are there no workhouses?
01:01:26Are there no prisons?
01:01:28Are there no workhouses?
01:01:30Are there no prisons?
01:01:32Are there no workhouses?
01:01:39I am in the presence of the spirit of Christmas yet to come.
01:01:55And you're going to show me shadows of things that have not yet happened but will happen.
01:02:01Spirit of the future, I fear you more than any other specter I've seen.
01:02:05But even in my fear, I must tell you, I am too old.
01:02:09I cannot change.
01:02:11It is not that I am impenitent.
01:02:14It is just that I...
01:02:16Oh, wouldn't it be better if I just went home to bed?
01:02:23No.
01:02:27Lead me then.
01:02:39He shall cover thee with his feathers, and under his wings thou shalt trust.
01:02:51His truth shall be thy shield and buckler.
01:02:54Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night, nor for the arrows that flyeth by day.
01:03:00A thousand shall fall at thy side, and ten thousand at thy right hand.
01:03:05But it shall not come nigh thee.
01:03:07For he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways.
01:03:12Because he has set his love upon me, therefore will I deliver him.
01:03:17I will set him on high, because he hath known my name.
01:03:21Because thou hast made the Lord which is my refuge, even the Most High thy habitation.
01:03:26There shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling.
01:03:32He shall call upon me, and I will answer him.
01:03:35I will be with him in trouble.
01:03:37I will deliver him and honour him.
01:03:42Shall I stop reading?
01:03:43No, no, it's only the colour.
01:03:45It hurts my eyes.
01:03:49They're better now.
01:03:52It makes them weak by candlelight.
01:03:54And I wouldn't show your father weak eyes when he comes home for the world.
01:03:58He must be near his time.
01:04:00Past it, rather.
01:04:02But he seems to be walking a little slower than he used these last few evenings.
01:04:06Oh, I've known him walk with tiny Tim on his shoulder very fast indeed.
01:04:11So have I.
01:04:11Often.
01:04:13And so have I.
01:04:14So have I.
01:04:15But then he was very light to carry, and his father loved him, so it was no trouble.
01:04:20No trouble.
01:04:33I'm a little late, my dear.
01:04:35Please forgive me.
01:04:36You must be cold and tired.
01:04:38Sit near the fire.
01:04:39No, no, I'm very content, my dear.
01:04:43Very content.
01:04:46I went to see the place where he will rest.
01:04:49It's sheltered by green trees, my dear, and very quiet and still.
01:04:53It was strange, but as I stood there, I felt his hand slip in mine as if he was standing beside me and comforting me.
01:05:01I felt very peaceful, my dear.
01:05:04He was telling me, you see, in his own little way, that he's happy.
01:05:10Truly happy now, and that we must cease to grieve for him and try to be happy too.
01:05:15Oh, dear.
01:05:16Oh, dear.
01:05:24My darling.
01:05:25Oh Robert, my lord.
01:05:27Oh, Robert.
01:05:28I don't know.
01:05:59Hello, Joe.
01:06:00What?
01:06:01Oh, Joe.
01:06:02Well, come on.
01:06:04No, let the laundress go first.
01:06:06No, no, dear, you was here first.
01:06:08After you, I'm sure.
01:06:12Oh, look, old Joe, he's a chance.
01:06:15If a child lady and the laundress and the undertaker
01:06:17haven't all met here at the same time without meaning it.
01:06:20Well, you couldn't have met in a better place.
01:06:22Let's go into the parlor.
01:06:24You were made free a bit long ago, eh?
01:06:26And the other two aren't strangers, eh?
01:06:29Wait a minute.
01:06:30Just like shut the door of the shop, eh?
01:06:34Just shut the door of the shop.
01:06:37Oh, it creaks.
01:06:39There's not a rusted piece of metal in the face like its own hinges.
01:06:42And I'm sure there are no old bones here like mine.
01:06:46We're all suitable to our call, isn't it?
01:06:49We're all well met.
01:06:50Coming to the parlor, eh?
01:06:53Coming to the parlor.
01:06:57Who goes first?
01:06:58What odds, now?
01:06:59We're all met at the once.
01:07:01Everyone's got a right to take care of themselves.
01:07:04He always did.
01:07:05Oh, that's true enough.
01:07:06No one more so.
01:07:07Why, then, don't stand staring as if you was afraid, woman.
01:07:11Who's the wiser?
01:07:12We're not going to pick holes in each other's coats, I suppose.
01:07:14No, indeed.
01:07:15Oh, we hope not.
01:07:17Very well, then.
01:07:18Who's the worst for the loss of a few things like these?
01:07:20Not a dead man, I suppose.
01:07:22No, indeed.
01:07:23If he wanted to keep them after he was dead, why wasn't he amiable in his lifetime?
01:07:28If he had been, he'd have had somebody with him when he was struck with death.
01:07:32Instead of lying, gasping out his last there alone by himself.
01:07:35There never was a tour word spoke.
01:07:37It was a judgment on him.
01:07:38I wish it was a little heavier one, and it would have been if I could have laid my hands on anything else.
01:07:43We knew pretty well we was helping ourselves before we come here, I believe.
01:07:47It's no sin.
01:07:48Open the bundle, Joe.
01:07:49No, no.
01:07:50I'll go first.
01:07:51Just to show we all got trust in one another.
01:07:54It's very polite of you, I do grant, I'm sure.
01:08:01Watch.
01:08:03Fob.
01:08:04See you.
01:08:05Pencil case.
01:08:06Sleeve buttons.
01:08:07Brooch.
01:08:08Yes.
01:08:10Eight shillings, this lot, and I wouldn't give you another sixpence.
01:08:14Not if I was born for life for not doing it.
01:08:18Who's next?
01:08:21Always the lady, dear.
01:08:23I shall have to insist you all stop and watch mine, now that we're so open and above with each other.
01:08:30Two sheets.
01:08:31Two towels.
01:08:32Shirt.
01:08:33Sea spoons.
01:08:34Two silver.
01:08:36Sugar tongs.
01:08:37Boots assorted.
01:08:38Four.
01:08:40Here.
01:08:41Seventeen and six.
01:08:43I always give too much to a lady.
01:08:45It's a weakness of mine.
01:08:46That's how I come to ruin meself.
01:08:48Here.
01:08:49If you ask for another penny, if you ask for another penny, made it an open question, I'd regret me liberality.
01:08:55Knock on half a crown.
01:08:56Now open my bundle, Joe.
01:08:57Now open my bundle, Joe.
01:09:00Come on, what's in it?
01:09:01Ah, you wait and see.
01:09:04Yeah.
01:09:04Bed curtains.
01:09:09Bed curtains?
01:09:11Bed curtains.
01:09:13Bed curtains.
01:09:14Bed curtains.
01:09:14Don't you say you took these down, rings and all, and him lying there?
01:09:21Yes, I do.
01:09:22Why not?
01:09:24You was born to make a fortune, ma'am, and you certainly will.
01:09:29I certainly won't hold back my hand when I can get something in it.
01:09:33For the sake of such a man as he was, I promise you, Joe.
01:09:35This is blankets, too.
01:09:36Who else, do you think?
01:09:38He ain't likely to take cold without him, I dare say.
01:09:41He didn't have anything catching, did he?
01:09:43Oh, don't you be afraid of that.
01:09:45I wasn't too fond of his company, I'd loiter about him for such things if he did.
01:09:50And you can look through that till your eyes open, you won't find a hole in it.
01:09:54It's the best one he had, and a fine one, too.
01:09:57They'd have wasted it if it hadn't been for me.
01:10:00What do you mean, wasted it?
01:10:02Well, they'd have buried him in it, of course.
01:10:04But I took it off of him again, as if Calico ain't good enough for burying.
01:10:08Anyway, it's just as becoming to the body.
01:10:11He couldn't have looked uglier than what he did in this one.
01:10:14It's poetic justice.
01:10:17He frightened everybody away from him when he was alive,
01:10:20and now he benefits us when he's dead.
01:10:30No, I don't know much about it either way.
01:10:32I only know he's dead.
01:10:34When did he die?
01:10:35Last night, I believe.
01:10:36What was the matter with him?
01:10:37I thought he'd never die.
01:10:39So did he, I dare say.
01:10:41What's he done with all his money?
01:10:42Left it to his company.
01:10:44Where else?
01:10:45He didn't leave it to me.
01:10:46That's all I know.
01:10:47Well, the funeral won't cost much, that's certain.
01:10:50On my soul, I can't think of anyone who'll go to it.
01:10:53I don't mind going.
01:10:54Here's a luncheon provided.
01:10:55But I must be fed, or else I stay at home.
01:11:06I know those men.
01:11:08They're men of business, very wealthy, very important.
01:11:10Who's funeral were they talking about?
01:11:17Strange.
01:11:19My usual place is over there, under the clock.
01:11:23I ought to be there this time of day.
01:11:25But I'm not.
01:11:28I'm not.
01:11:28Before I draw nearer to that stone, answer me one question.
01:11:54Are these the shadows of things that must be?
01:11:57Or are the only shadows of things that might be?
01:12:09I know that men's deeds foreshadow certain ends.
01:12:12But if the deeds be departed from, surely the ends will change.
01:12:17Tell me to sew with what you show me now.
01:12:19The End
01:12:35No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no
01:13:05I'm not the man I was.
01:13:06Believe me, I'm not the man I was.
01:13:08Why show me all this if I am beyond all hope?
01:13:11Oh, pity me, spirit, pity me.
01:13:13And help me.
01:13:14Help me to sponge away the right hand on the stone if I repent.
01:13:17And I do repent, I do repent.
01:13:20I'll make good wrongs I've done my fellow men.
01:13:22And I'll change.
01:13:23I'm not the man I was.
01:13:25I'm not the man I was.
01:13:27Believe me, believe me.
01:13:28I'm not the man I was.
01:13:29I'm not the man I was.
01:13:31I'm not the man I was.
01:13:33I'm not the man I was.
01:13:38I'm not the man I was.
01:13:41I'm not the man.
01:14:03Good morning, sir.
01:14:19Tell me, what day is it?
01:14:22What day?
01:14:23What's Christmas Day, Costa?
01:14:25Christmas Day.
01:14:26Christmas Day.
01:14:27Then I haven't missed it.
01:14:29The spirits must have done everything in one night.
01:14:33Of course, they can do anything, can't they?
01:14:36Of course they can.
01:14:41Are you quiet yourself, sir?
01:14:48What?
01:14:48I don't know.
01:14:52No, I don't think so.
01:14:55I hope not.
01:14:56What?
01:14:58The curtains are still here.
01:14:59They're still here.
01:15:00You didn't, you didn't tear them down and sell them.
01:15:03They're here now.
01:15:04Everything's here.
01:15:07I'm here.
01:15:08I'm here.
01:15:08And the shadows of things that would be can still be dispelled.
01:15:14And they will be.
01:15:15I know they will be.
01:15:17I know.
01:15:18I don't know what to do.
01:15:21I'm as light as a feather.
01:15:24I'm as happy as an angel.
01:15:27I'm as merry as a schoolboy.
01:15:29I'm as giddy.
01:15:31I'm as giddy as a drunken man.
01:15:32I never...
01:15:34A merry Christmas, Ebenezer.
01:15:38You old humbug.
01:15:42And a happy new year.
01:15:43As if you deserved it.
01:15:45A merry Christmas, Mrs. Dilber.
01:15:48Thank you, sir.
01:15:49Thank you, thank you, thank you.
01:15:50And many, many of them...
01:15:52Rockwise!
01:15:55Rockwise!
01:15:57Yes.
01:15:59Look, Mrs. Dilber.
01:16:00There's the corner where the spirit of Christmas presents is.
01:16:02And there's the door where Jacob Marley's ghost came through.
01:16:05And there's the window where I saw the wandering spirit.
01:16:07It's right.
01:16:07It's true.
01:16:08It all happened.
01:16:09I don't know what day of the month it is.
01:16:11I don't know how long I've been amongst the spirits.
01:16:13I don't know anything.
01:16:15I never did know anything.
01:16:17But now I know that I don't know anything.
01:16:20I don't know anything.
01:16:22I never did know anything.
01:16:23But now I know that I don't know.
01:16:26All of the Christmas morning.
01:16:27I must stand in my head.
01:16:28I must stand in my head.
01:16:32Help!
01:16:33Help!
01:16:33Help!
01:16:37Come back.
01:16:38Come back.
01:16:39Come back.
01:16:39Come back.
01:16:39Come back.
01:16:45Please, please, Mrs. Dilber.
01:16:46I am not mad.
01:16:50Even if I look...
01:16:51Ah!
01:16:52Don't be far, Mr. Scrooge, sir.
01:16:54You've forced me to scream for the beetle.
01:16:56A beetle?
01:16:57A beetle, madam.
01:16:58A beetle.
01:16:59A guinea?
01:17:00Here.
01:17:01What for?
01:17:02I'll give you one guess.
01:17:03To keep me mouth shut.
01:17:04Hmm?
01:17:05Oh!
01:17:06Oh!
01:17:07Oh!
01:17:08Oh!
01:17:09Oh!
01:17:10Oh!
01:17:11Oh!
01:17:12Oh!
01:17:13To keep me mouth shut.
01:17:14Oh, no.
01:17:15No, no, no, Mrs. Dilber.
01:17:17It's for a Christmas present.
01:17:19A Christmas present?
01:17:24For me?
01:17:27Of course, for you.
01:17:32A merry, merry Christmas.
01:17:35Dear Mrs. Dilber.
01:17:37Oh!
01:17:38How much do I pay you?
01:17:40Two shillings a week.
01:17:42What?
01:17:43Two shillings?
01:17:44It's forthwith raised to ten.
01:17:46Ten shillings a week, dear!
01:17:48You sure you don't want to see a doctor?
01:17:50A doctor, certainly not, nor the undertaker.
01:17:52Now off you go and enjoy yourself.
01:17:54Like a good girl.
01:17:56Boobs you, aren't you?
01:18:00Merry Christmas, Mr. Scrooge.
01:18:03And keep him with the situation.
01:18:11Bevels.
01:18:12Oh, very, many pickles.
01:18:22A beautiful morning.
01:18:27Hello there.
01:18:28Hello.
01:18:29You, you boy.
01:18:30You.
01:18:31Who, me?
01:18:32Yes, you.
01:18:33Do you know who the butcher is in the next street with one?
01:18:35I should hope so.
01:18:38Intelligent boy.
01:18:39A remarkable boy.
01:18:40Tell me, this old prized turkey that was hanging there, not the little turkey, the big one?
01:18:44The one as big as me?
01:18:45Me?
01:18:46Yes.
01:18:47A delightful boy.
01:18:48Yes, my buck, the one as big as you.
01:18:50It's hanging there still.
01:18:51Is it?
01:18:52Very well then, go and buy it.
01:18:54Whoa, Claire!
01:18:55No, no, no.
01:18:56Wait a minute, wait a minute.
01:18:57I'm in earnest.
01:18:58Tell the butcher to bring it here and I'll give him the name of the party he has to send it to.
01:19:02Come back with the butcher and I'll give you a shilling.
01:19:04Come back with him in less than five minutes or I'll give you half a crown.
01:19:09What an enchanting boy.
01:19:16I'll send it to Bob Cratchit.
01:19:18That's what I'll do.
01:19:19He'll never dream where it came from.
01:19:21Now, let's see.
01:19:22I must have a label.
01:19:23Label, label, label, label, label, label.
01:19:25Label.
01:19:29It's twice the size of tiny ten.
01:19:34Mr. Robert Cratchit to Porter Street, Camden Town.
01:19:39That's you, Robert.
01:19:40At least there's no one else I know of.
01:19:43I think I know who sent it.
01:19:45Who?
01:19:46Who?
01:19:47Mr. Scrooge.
01:19:49Oh, dear, oh, dear.
01:19:50Whatever made you think it might be him?
01:19:52I don't know.
01:19:53I just think it.
01:19:55What would make Mr. Scrooge take such leave of his senses suddenly?
01:20:01Christmas.
01:20:04Well, I think it's really fun.
01:20:05Well, I think people are telling you,
01:20:06You'll tell you, obviously.
01:20:07When I guess that he will imagine this sad matter.
01:20:09It's the only person I've ever seen in the audience.
01:20:10It's as if.
01:20:11When I'm now little too close, I get your attention and image of Bitte.
01:20:13wants to see you for the person I know...
01:20:14Speaking of económ helical woman.
01:20:15He웠 the anger that I hate you then.
01:20:17Keep it so far.
01:20:18I love you.
01:20:20ves Mickie.
01:20:21In the Hmmm, of course.
01:20:22In Scarlet Town, where I was born, there was a fair maid dwelling.
01:20:30Maiden, free youth, I went la day.
01:20:35Her name was Barbara Allen.
01:20:40All in the merry month of May, when green bulbs they were swelling.
01:20:46Young Jimmy Rove on his deathbed lay, for love of Barbara Allen.
01:20:58So slowly, slowly she came up, and slowly she came by him.
01:21:07And all she said, well, well, she came.
01:21:12Oh, young man, I think.
01:21:17Oh.
01:21:20Uncle Ebenezer.
01:21:23Fred, is it too late to accept your invitation to dinner?
01:21:27Too late? I'm delighted, delighted.
01:21:30My dear, look who it is.
01:21:42Oh, can you forgive a pig-headed old fool for having no eyes to see with, no ears to hear with, all these years?
01:21:56Bless you, dear uncle.
01:21:59You've made Fred so happy.
01:22:05Oh, bless you.
01:22:08Dennis, poker.
01:22:09Come on, everybody, come on.
01:22:37Everybody.
01:22:38Somebody.
01:22:38Somebody.
01:22:38Somebody.
01:22:38Somebody.
01:22:39Somebody.
01:22:40Somebody.
01:22:41Somebody.
01:22:41Somebody.
01:22:42Somebody.
01:22:42Somebody.
01:22:43Somebody.
01:22:43Somebody.
01:22:44Somebody.
01:22:44Somebody.
01:22:45Somebody.
01:22:45Somebody.
01:22:46Somebody.
01:22:46Somebody.
01:22:47Somebody.
01:22:47Somebody.
01:22:48Somebody.
01:22:49Somebody.
01:22:49Somebody.
01:22:50Somebody.
01:22:50Somebody.
01:22:51Somebody.
01:22:51Somebody.
01:22:52Somebody.
01:22:52Somebody.
01:22:53Somebody.
01:22:53Somebody.
01:22:54Somebody.
01:22:55Somebody.
01:22:55Somebody.
01:22:56Somebody.
01:22:57Somebody.
01:22:58Somebody.
01:22:59Somebody.
01:23:00Somebody.
01:23:01Somebody.
01:23:02Somebody.
01:23:03Somebody.
01:23:04Somebody.
01:23:05Somebody.
01:23:06Somebody.
01:23:37Mr. Gretchen, you're late.
01:23:47Sir, what do you mean by coming in here at this time of day?
01:23:51I'm very sorry, sir.
01:23:54I am behind my time, sir.
01:23:56You are indeed.
01:23:59Step this way, Mr. Gretchen, please.
01:24:02It's only once a year, sir.
01:24:04It won't be repeated.
01:24:06I was making rather merry yesterday, sir.
01:24:11I'm sure you were.
01:24:13Well, we won't beat about the bush, my friend.
01:24:15I'm not going to stand this sort of thing any longer.
01:24:18Which leaves me no alternative but to raise your salary.
01:24:22I haven't taken leave of my senses, Bob.
01:24:42I've come to them.
01:24:43From now on, I want to try to help you to raise that family of yours.
01:24:50If you'll let me.
01:24:51Well, we'll talk it over later, Bob.
01:24:56Over a bowl of hot punch.
01:25:03Meanwhile, you just go and put some more coal in that fire.
01:25:07You go straight out and buy a new coal scuttle.
01:25:10And you do that before you dot another I, Bob Cracket.
01:25:23I don't deserve to be so happy.
01:25:29I can't help it.
01:25:30Scrooge was better than his word.
01:25:40He became as good a friend, as good a master, and as good a man as the good old city ever knew.
01:25:46Or any other good old city, town, or borough in the good old world.
01:25:49And to Tiny Tim, who lived and got well again, he became a second father.
01:25:55I'm a scrooge!
01:25:59And it was always said that he knew how to keep Christmas well.
01:26:02If any man alive possessed the knowledge.
01:26:05May that be truly said of us and all of us.
01:26:09And so, as Tiny Tim observed, God bless us, everyone.
01:26:13May that be truly said of us and all of us.
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