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Within three months of its first publication, Charles Dickens A Christmas Carol had already been adapted for the stage. By February 1844 it was running at eight different venues. The dramaturgical possibilities were obviously too many for theatre managers to resist. The tale could be told as a sentimental Yuletide fable, as a social polemic, as a cautionary religious-themed parable, or simply played with a mind for its dramatic possibilities. The clearly drawn characters and straightforward plot had already burned themselves into the imagination of nineteenth century England, and its continued representation was inevitable. Dickens himself performed excerpts on stage during the famous reading tours of his later years (recently dramatized in The Mystery of Charles Dickens). Not all of the critics liked it, of course, but its detractors were usually likened to the storys central character. This proved as effective a piece of satire for silencing voices of dissent as the story itself was for raising voices in joy and anguish. It takes a humbug indeed to sneer at Mr. Dickens today.