Scrooge inspiration in Charles Dickens's novel, Christmas Carol, is a prominent shooter. In fact, in the original, he reflects on the past, which is stingy with the help of ghosts who visited on Christmas Eve, but his name is still felt more like the wicked than the good. There is no one who would like to hear that he is a `` screw like. '' Disney's `` Scrooge McDuck, '' as well as many of the characters he created, are portrayed as a single, obsessed, and obsessed with money.

Growing up reading a fairy tale book featuring Scrooge McDuck and Dickens's original novel, I, like others, knew exactly the exact image that caught up with its existence. In spite of his childhood, he sent a tear-filled resentment to his parents who didn't buy toys until the end, and even after a bit of maturity (although he hadn't spit out of his mouth at this time), he naturally remembered his four syllable names.

But in the winter of Christmas, when I accidentally reread Christmas Carol, I felt empathy that I could never have imagined in the words of cold and still stingy Scrooge.
"Uncle, it's Christmas soon, please open your face and smile!" The greedy old man scrooge coldly with his cheerful nephew. "I do not earn anything, but the debt is piled up, I'm only one year older, but not getting better. Do you look like I'm Christmas now?"

Lightly disregarding his nephew's favor, he tells the company's employees that they are hungry for salaries, lays down to work as early as the next morning as Christmas breaks, and goes back to a cold house with only one candle instead of a fireplace to reduce heating costs. .

The initial screw, which Dickens intended and portrayed in order to achieve a sharp contrast with the changes in the back, is, in a word, a dirty and deadly human. But these days, the cold-blooded employer, who is not even recognized by his family, but on the one hand, runs with only the successes of school-based bullying, but as a result, he is a lone lone.

His appearance, bound by desire and selfishness, is frowned upon. But the reason he became a monster seems looming. It is because the desperation and loneliness that crushed him in the journey of life are no longer unfamiliar to the person who once believed that he was a completely distant human figure who believed that the dark side of the world was artificially born. The reality is that 'there's nothing to earn, but debt and age continue to accumulate'.

Not surprisingly, being in the same situation does not make everyone the same monster. In Christmas Carol, there is a truck of friendly and wise people who appreciate the given given that it is similar or more difficult than Scrooge. Scrooge also experienced various time and spaces from the past to the future with three ghosts dispatched from heaven to edify the world's stingy old man. For me, who sympathized with his cynical ambassador, that's a happy ending.

He can now enjoy Christmas. He and his nephew have a simple but hearty meal, play childish games with the locals, laugh at their stomachs, and send a chubby turkey to their staff.

Even if Scrooge, a pronoun of miser, and a symbol of apathy, enjoys joy, how can you not feel like a country? I'm anxious about the reality that I haven't done so much, and I don't want to get one year old in a week, but I want to have some crispy chicken and a few cans of cold beer this Christmas. While having fun that Scrooge inspiration helped create this precious time.

# In-It # In-It #Summary #Lansun Book Club

(Photo: Walt Disney 'Christmas Carol' image)