Lyrics A Christmas Carol - Sarantos
A
Christmas
Carol
By
Charles
Dickens
Master
Peter,
and
the
two
ubiquitous
young
Cratchits
went
to
fetch
the
goose,
with
which
they
soon
returned
in
high
procession.
Such
a
bustle
ensued
that
you
might
have
thought
a
goose
the
rarest
of
all
birds;
a
feathered
phenomenon,
to
which
a
black
swan
was
a
matter
of
course
--
and
in
truth
it
was
something
very
like
it
in
that
house.
Mrs.
Cratchit
made
the
gravy
(ready
beforehand
in
a
little
saucepan)
hissing
hot;
Master
Peter
mashed
the
potatoes
with
incredible
vigour;
Miss
Belinda
sweetened
up
the
apple-sauce;
Martha
dusted
the
hot
plates;
Bob
took
Tiny
Tim
beside
him
in
a
tiny
corner
at
the
table;
the
two
young
Cratchits
set
chairs
for
everybody,
not
forgetting
themselves,
and
mounting
guard
upon
their
posts,
crammed
spoons
into
their
mouths,
lest
they
should
shriek
for
goose
before
their
turn
came
to
be
helped.
At
last
the
dishes
were
set
on,
and
grace
was
said.
It
was
succeeded
by
a
breathless
pause,
as
Mrs.
Cratchit,
looking
slowly
all
along
the
carving-knife,
prepared
to
plunge
it
in
the
breast;
but
when
she
did,
and
when
the
long
expected
gush
of
stuffing
issued
forth,
one
murmur
of
delight
arose
all
round
the
room,
and
even
Tiny
Tim,
excited
by
the
two
young
Cratchits,
beat
on
the
table
with
the
handle
of
his
knife,
and
feebly
cried
Hurrah!
There
never
was
such
a
goose.
Bob
said
he
didn′t
believe
there
ever
was
such
a
goose
cooked.
Its
tenderness
and
flavour,
size
and
cheapness,
were
the
themes
of
universal
admiration.
Eked
out
by
the
apple-sauce
and
mashed
potatoes,
it
was
a
sufficient
dinner
for
the
whole
family;
indeed,
as
Mrs.
Cratchit
said
with
great
delight
(surveying
one
small
atom
of
a
bone
upon
the
dish),
they
hadn't
ate
it
all
at
last!
Yet
every
one
had
had
enough,
and
the
youngest
Cratchits
in
particular,
were
steeped
in
sage
and
onion
to
the
eyebrows!
But
now,
the
plates
being
changed
by
Miss
Belinda,
Mrs.
Cratchit
left
the
room
alone--too
nervous
to
bear
witnesses--to
take
the
pudding
up
and
bring
it
in.
Suppose
it
should
not
be
done
enough!
Suppose
it
should
break
in
turning
out.
Suppose
somebody
should
have
got
over
the
wall
of
the
backyard
and
stolen
it,
while
they
were
merry
with
the
goose
--
a
supposition
at
which
the
two
young
Cratchits
became
livid!
All
sorts
of
horrors
were
supposed.
Hallo!
A
great
deal
of
steam!
The
pudding
was
out
of
the
copper.
A
smell
like
a
washing-day!
That
was
the
cloth.
A
smell
like
an
eating-house
and
a
pastry
cook′s
next
door
to
each
other,
with
a
laundress's
next
door
to
that!
That
was
the
pudding!
In
half
a
minute
Mrs.
Cratchit
entered--flushed,
but
smiling
proudly--with
the
pudding,
like
a
speckled
cannon-ball,
so
hard
and
firm,
blazing
in
half
of
half-a-quartern
of
ignited
brandy,
and
bedight
with
Christmas
holly
stuck
into
the
top.
Oh,
a
wonderful
pudding!
Bob
Cratchit
said,
and
calmly
too,
that
he
regarded
it
as
the
greatest
success
achieved
by
Mrs.
Cratchit
since
their
marriage.
Mrs.
Cratchit
said
that
now
the
weight
was
off
her
mind,
she
would
confess
she
had
had
her
doubts
about
the
quantity
of
the
flour.
Everybody
had
something
to
say
about
it,
but
nobody
said
or
thought
it
was
at
all
a
small
pudding
for
a
large
family.
It
would
have
been
flat
heresy
to
do
so.
Any
Cratchit
would
have
blushed
to
hint
at
such
a
thing.
At
last
the
dinner
was
all
done,
the
cloth
was
cleared,
the
hearth
swept,
and
the
fire
made
up.
The
compound
in
the
jug
being
tasted,
and
considered
perfect,
apples
and
oranges
were
put
upon
the
table,
and
a
shovel-full
of
chestnuts
on
the
fire.
Then
all
the
Cratchit
family
drew
round
the
hearth,
in
what
Bob
Cratchit
called
a
circle,
meaning
half
a
one;
and
at
Bob
Cratchit's
elbow
stood
the
family
display
of
glasses.
Two
tumblers,
and
a
custard-cup
without
a
handle.
These
held
the
hot
stuff
from
the
jug,
however,
as
well
as
golden
goblets
would
have
done;
and
Bob
served
it
out
with
beaming
looks,
while
the
chestnuts
on
the
fire
sputtered
and
cracked
noisily.
Then
Bob
proposed:
A
Merry
Christmas
to
us
all,
my
dears.
God
bless
us!"
Which
all
the
family
re-echoed.
God
bless
us
every
one!"
said
Tiny
Tim,
the
last
of
all.
1 The Happiest Time of the Year
2 Jesus Is Born
3 It's Christmas Time!
4 On This Night
5 We Wish You a Merry Christmas
6 O Little Town of Bethlehem
7 Joy to the World
8 Deck the Halls
9 O Holy Night
10 Jingle Bells
11 The First Noel
12 Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
13 Silent Night
14 Oh Come All Ye Faithful
15 A Christmas Carol
16 The Holy Night
17 The Nutcracker
18 The Elves and the Shoemaker
19 Santa Claus's Letter
20 'Twas the Night Before Christmas
21 Santa's Team
22 The Little Match Girl
23 Santa Claus Does Not Forget
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