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InayatShah — Cannongate Kirk

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Published: 2023-04-18 07:38:11 +0000 UTC; Views: 340; Favourites: 28; Downloads: 0
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Description Location: Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

CANONGATE KIRK IS A PARISH belonging to the Church of Scotland. The graveyard is the final resting place for a few of the country’s most notable figures. Among those interred are economist Adam Smith and poet Robert Fergusson. David Rizzio, Queen Mary of Scot’s private secretary, who was murdered at nearby Holyrood Palace, is also interred here. However, one grave had one of the greatest impacts on literary history, and it was that of a simple corn merchant.

In 1841, Charles Dickens paid a visit to Edinburgh for a lecture he was giving. While taking a long walk along the Royal Mile, he passed through the graveyard of Canongate Kirk. There he encountered a gravestone he found particularly strange.

Ebenezer Lennox Scroggie had been a corn merchant most of his life, and so his tombstone described him as “a meal man.” In the dimming light of the evening, Dickens misread the inscription as “a mean man.” He later wrote in his personal notebook that “to be remembered through eternity only for being mean seemed the greatest testament to a life wasted.”

Two years would pass before Dickens dug this name out of his notes, and when he did, he created one of literature’s most beloved symbols of redemption and Christmas spirit. Adjusting the name to “Ebenezer Scrooge,” the protagonist of A Christmas Carol was born.

Scroggie himself was no saint. In fact, he was best known for goosing the Countess of Mansfield during the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. However, he was far from the cruel old man Dickens created. Outside his lack of candor, Scroggie for two years served as Edinburgh’s Lord Provost and provided supplies for Captain James Cook’s various endeavors
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