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O. Henry’s decision to name the wealthy and miserly character in the story “Ebenezer” is likely an allusion to another famous literary Ebenezer—the affluent and tight-fisted Ebenezer Scrooge from Charles Dickens’s A Christmas Carol. Like it is now, A Christmas Carol was well-known at the time, and O. Henry probably expected his readers to understand the connection that he was making between the two men.
Sam’s introduction to Ebenezer in “The Ransom of Red Chief” captures some of his shared qualities with Dickens’s Ebenezer:
We selected for our victim the only child of a prominent citizen named Ebenezer Dorset. The father was respectable and tight, a mortgage fancier and a stern, upright collection-plate passer and forecloser.
Like Ebenezer Scrooge, Ebenezer Dorset is a moneylender who earns his wealth from the interest on unpaid debts. Also like Scrooge, Dorset is incredibly stingy with his money, as evidenced by the fact that he is a “collection-plate passer,” meaning that he does not add his own donation to the collection plate passed around in church but instead simply hands it on to the next person.
It is notable that, at the end of A Christmas Carol, Ebenezer Scrooge has had a change of heart and learned a lesson about the importance of generosity. Ebenezer Dorset in “The Ransom of Red Chief,” on the other hand, remains greedy and manipulative at the end of the tale. This demonstrates how, unlike Dickens, O. Henry is not writing a moral tale, but a lighthearted comedy.












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