TO BE REMEMBERED FOREVER—WRONGLY—FOR BEING MEAN.

TO BE REMEMBERED FOREVER—WRONGLY—FOR BEING MEAN. Dickens is quoted as saying in his diary about Ebenezer Scroggie: “to be remembered through eternity only for being mean seemed the greatest testament to a life wasted.” And that is a message of A CHRISTMAS CAROL. It is, of course, a great irony that Scroggie was not a mean man. Indeed, Timothy Taylor cites this post on the History of Leith, Edinburgh:

“In life, Scroggie was apparently a rambunctious, generous and licentious man who gave wild parties, impregnated the odd serving wench and once wonderfully interrupted the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland by grabbing the buttocks of a hapless countess.”

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