
(Photo By Angel Franco for The New York Times.)
The online display offers a unique insight into the creative process behind a Christmas classic. Charles Dickens wrote the story of the haunting of the miserly Ebenezer Scrooge by the the ghosts of Christmas Past, Christmas Present, and Christmas Yet To Come out of sheer necessity: he was broke and needed cash. The tale of Tiny Tim and his family's foundering fortunes was written in a mere six weeks, and six-thousand copies of the sixty-six page book were sold to support the six Dickens children. But Dickens own perfectionism caused his profits from the initial printing to be less than a quarter of what he had hoped for: he insisted on hand-colored illustrations by famed illustrator John Leech, which sent production costs soaring.

(Dickens insisted the painting be redone with the spirit dressed in green.)

The Final, Corrected Illustration.
(Images courtesy of The Morgan Library and Museum.)
(Images courtesy of The Morgan Library and Museum.)
Page 37 of A Christmas Carol will be on display at the Morgan Library and Museum until January 10, 2010. The online manuscript will remain available to scholars, researchers, and the just plain curious indefinitely. The New York Times is even sponsoring a contest in conjunction with this rare glimpse at the rough draft of a literary landmark: readers are invited to submit their nomination for the most interesting edit to The Times, with the winner treated to high tea at the Morgan Library. But in this shaky economy Christmas charity only goes so far: travel expenses to and from Manhattan are NOT included. Bah, humbug!
Posted by Nancy Mattoon
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