Scrooge Was Libeled
I have felt for many years that Ebenezer Scrooge was criminally libeled and horribly misunderstood. The following is an article that pretty well states my position. Enjoy. And do you agree?
Scrooge
Defended
by Michael Levin
It's
Christmas again, time to celebrate the transformation of Ebenezer
Scrooge. You know the ritual: boo the curmudgeon initially
encountered in Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol,
then cheer the sweetie pie he becomes in the end. It's too bad no one
notices that the curmudgeon had a point—quite a few points, in
fact.
To
appreciate them, it is necessary first to distinguish Scrooge's
outlook on life from his disagreeable persona. He is said to have a
pointed nose and a harsh voice, but not all hardheaded businessmen
are so lamentably endowed, nor are their feckless nephews (remember
Fred?) always "ruddy and handsome," and possessed of pretty
wives. These touches of the storyteller's art only bias the issue.
So
let's look without preconceptions at Scrooge's allegedly underpaid
clerk, Bob Cratchit. The fact is, if Cratchit's skills were worth
more to anyone than the fifteen shillings Scrooge pays him weekly,
there would be someone glad to offer it to him. Since no one has, and
since Cratchit's profit-maximizing boss is hardly a man to pay for
nothing, Cratchit must be worth exactly his present wages.
No
doubt Cratchit needs—i.e., wants—more, to support his family and
care for Tiny Tim. But Scrooge did not force Cratchit to father
children he is having difficulty supporting. If Cratchit had children
while suspecting he would be unable to afford them, he, not Scrooge,
is responsible for their plight. And if Cratchit didn't know how
expensive they would be, why must Scrooge assume the burden of
Cratchit's misjudgment?
As
for that one lump of coal Scrooge allows him, it bears emphasis that
Cratchit has not been chained to his chilly desk. If he stays there,
he shows by his behavior that he prefers his present
wages-plus-comfort package to any other he has found, or supposes
himself likely to find. Actions speak louder than grumbling, and the
reader can hardly complain about what Cratchit evidently finds
satisfactory.
More
notorious even than his miserly ways are Scrooge's cynical words.
"Are there no prisons," he jibes when solicited for
charity, "and the Union workhouses?"
Not
necessarily. As Scrooge observes, he supports those institutions with
his taxes. Already forced to help those who can't or won't help
themselves, it is not unreasonable for him to balk at volunteering
additional funds for their extra comfort.
Scrooge
is skeptical that many would prefer death to the workhouse, and he is
unmoved by talk of the workhouse's cheerlessness. He is right to be
unmoved, for society's provisions for the poor must be,
well, Dickensian. The more pleasant the alternatives to gainful
employment, the greater will be the number of people who seek these
alternatives, and the fewer there will be who engage in productive
labor. If society expects anyone to work, work had better be a lot
more attractive than idleness.
The
normally taciturn Scrooge lets himself go a bit when Cratchit hints
that he would like a paid Christmas holiday. "It's not fair,"
Scrooge objects, a charge not met by Cratchit's patently irrelevant
protest that Christmas comes but once a year. Unfair it is, for
Cratchit would doubtless object to a request for a day's
uncompensated labor, "and yet," as Scrooge shrewdly points
out, "you don't think me ill used when I pay a
day's wages for no work."
Cratchit
has apparently forgotten the golden rule. (Or is it that Scrooge has
so much more than Cratchit that the golden rule does not come into
play? But Scrooge doesn't think he has that much, and shouldn't he
have a say in the matter?)
Scrooge's
first employer, good old Fezziwig, was a lot freer with a guinea—he
throws his employees a Christmas party. What the Ghost of Christmas
Past does not explain is how Fezziwig afforded it. Did he attempt to
pass the added costs to his customers? Or did young Scrooge pay for
it anyway by working for marginally lower wages?
The
biggest of the Big Lies about Scrooge is the pointlessness of his
pursuit of money. "Wealth is of no use to him. He doesn't do any
good with it," opines ruddy nephew Fred.
Wrong
on both counts. Scrooge apparently lends money, and to discover the
good he does one need only inquire of the borrowers. Here is a
homeowner with a new roof, and there a merchant able to finance a
shipment of tea, bringing profit to himself and happiness to tea
drinkers, all thanks to Scrooge.
Dickens
doesn't mention Scrooge's satisfied customers, but there must have
been plenty of them for Scrooge to have gotten so rich.
Scrooge
is said to hound debtors so relentlessly that—as the Ghost of
Christmas Yet To Be is able to show him—an indebted couple rejoices
at his demise. The mere delay while their debt is transferred will
avert the ruin Scrooge would have imposed.
This
canard is triply absurd. First, a businessman as keen as Scrooge
would prefer to delay payment to protect his investment rather than
take possession of possibly useless collateral. (No
bank wants developers to fail and leave it the proud
possessor of a half-built shopping mall.) Second, the fretful couple
knew and agreed to the terms on which Scrooge insisted. By reneging
on the deal, they are effectively engaged in theft. Third, most
important, and completely overlooked by Ghost and by Dickens, there
are hopefuls whose own plans turn on borrowing the money returned to
Scrooge from his old accounts. Scrooge can't relent what Caroline and
her unnamed husband don't pay up, and he won't make a penny unless he
puts the money to use after he gets it back.
The
hard case, of course, is a payment due from Bob Cratchit, who needs
the money for an emergency operation on Tiny Tim. (Here I depart from
the text, but Dickens characters are so familiar to us they can be
pressed into unfamiliar roles.) If you think it is heartless of
Scrooge to demand payment, think of Sickly Sid, who needs an
operation even more urgently than Tim does, and whose father is
waiting to finance that operation by borrowing the money Cratchit is
expected to pay up.
Is
Tim's life more valuable than Sid's just because we've met him? And
how do we explain to Sid's father that his son won't be able to have
the operation after all, because Scrooge, as Christmas generosity, is
allowing Cratchit to reschedule his debt? Scrooge does not circulate
money from altruism, to be sure, but his motives, whatever they are,
are congruent with the public good.
But
what about those motives? Scrooge doesn't seem to get much
satisfaction from the services he may inadvertently perform, and that
seems to be part of Dickens's point. But who, apart from Dickens,
says that Scrooge is not enjoying himself? He spends all his time at
his business, likes to count his money, and has no outside interests.
At
the same time, Scrooge is not given to brooding and shows absolutely
no sign of depression or conflict. Whether he wished to or not,
Dickens has made Scrooge by far the most intelligent character in his
fable, and Dickens credits his creation with having nothing "fancy"
about him. So we conclude that, in his undemonstrative way, Scrooge
is productive and satisfied with his lot, which is to say happy.
There
can be no arguing with Dickens's wish to show the spiritual
advantages of love. But there was no need to make the object of his
lesson an entrepreneur whose ideas and practices benefit his
employees, society at large, and himself. Must such a man expect no
fairer a fate than to die scorned and alone? Bah, I say. Humbug.
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