Chapter Breaks | A Christmas Carol – Charles Dickens | Extract from Stave One | Marley’s Ghost
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About this listen
📖 A relaxing read aloud audiobook excerpt — ideal for unwinding, walking, studying, or resting.
🎧 A wintery, atmospheric read aloud from Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol — foggy London streets, a lonely room, and the first shiver of the supernatural. Perfect for listeners who enjoy classic ghost stories, Victorian atmosphere, and Christmas literature with a dark edge. 🎧 Audiobook Excerpt from Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol.Read by Chapter Breaks – Short Literary Escapes. Classic audio pills for your commute, bedtime unwind, or a break anytime. At Chapter Breaks, we carefully select and curate iconic passages from classic novels — timeless opening chapters, dramatic turning points, or unforgettable finales. Each episode is around 20–30 minutes, designed to let you dip into great literature without the commitment of a full audiobook. Charles Dickens – A Christmas Carol – Stave I | Marley’s Ghost. Fog, frost, and a chain heard in the dark. In this excerpt from Stave I, Christmas Eve ends in bitter cold. Scrooge shuts his counting-house with ill will, begrudges his clerk a holiday, and returns to his gloomy chambers through a yard so dark it seems watched by the very Genius of the Weather. Then the ordinary world begins to slip. A familiar door-knocker turns, impossibly, into a face — Jacob Marley’s face — and just as quickly becomes metal again. Inside, the silence deepens, the old rooms settle, and Scrooge tries to anchor himself in routine: gruel by a low fire, ledgers of the mind, and the reassurance of “Humbug!” But the house answers differently. A bell begins to swing. Every bell in the building rings. From the depths below comes the slow, unmistakable clank of a dragging chain — and at last, through the door, steps Marley's Ghost: transparent, death-cold, and bound in iron links forged from the instruments of a life spent in profit. What follows is a warning as bleak as the London fog: regret cannot redeem a life’s missed chances — but Scrooge is offered one last hope. Three Spirits will come. The first at one. And the night is no longer his own. We are about to walk into Dickens’s most famous Christmas haunting — where miserliness meets memory, and a locked door is no protection at all. Let’s open the page together; your chapter break begins now. If you enjoy classic literature, quiet storytelling, and immersive audiobook excerpts, listen, follow and share to help us bring more classics to life!
Music and visuals are in the public domain or licensed via Pictory – full licence available on their website.