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The lines "Holy infant, so tender and mild" are from the Christmas carol "Silent Night."
The opening lines refer to the death of Jacob Marley in 1836 on Christmas Eve
Quite a few phrases from the story, A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens, have come into the vernacular like, "the ghost of Christmas Past." But the most oft quoted lines are two, and they surely made the story popular even in it's time: As Tiny Tim observed, "God bless Us, Every One!" and "Bah," said Scrooge, "Humbug."
The song is "Carol of the Bells" and the line is "Hark How The Bells Sweet Silver Bells".
It is called Onto Bethlehem town.
Some simple Christmas ornament patterns are present shapes, Santa shapes, patterns on ornaments likes squares, diamonds, triangles, circles and wavy lines.
none the ghost of thee says nothing.
Carol Cable was acquired by General Cable in 1990. From then on, Carol brand cord, cordset, as well as automotive product lines came under General Cable.
Lucy gave Linus three reasons for memorizing his lines in the Christmas play in "A Charlie Brown Christmas."
Dicken's uses the term "staves" to mark the chapters of A Christmas Carol (published in 1843), but does not do so for any or his other books. The term is based on the book's title. Since a Christmas carol is a song, he names its divisions "staves", using a musical term meaning "verse" or "stanza" of a song.(A related, but not identical use of the term "stave" - singular now usually "staff" - is found in musical notation, to refer to one set of lines on which musical notes are written.)Note that Dickens used a similar device to denote the divisions of his next two Christmas books: the divisions of The Chimes (1844) are "Quarters" after the quarter-hour sounding of clock chimes; The Cricket on the Hearth (1845) is divided into "Chirps".
The death is that of Jacob Marley who was Scrooges partner in business. The opening lines contain the phrase "dead as a door nail" This is the first time the phrases was used.
It is not a festival