Coffee for Two: Difference between revisions
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==Plot== |
==Plot== |
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''Coffee for Two'' stars [[Uncle Scrooge]], and features a hobo and a diner waiter. A hobo idling on a street corner asks Uncle Scrooge |
''Coffee for Two'' stars [[Uncle Scrooge]], and features a hobo and a diner waiter. A hobo idling on a street corner twice asks Uncle Scrooge for a dime to buy a cup of coffee as the old tightwad hurries back and forth about his business. The third time, Scrooge takes the hobo to a diner. The old miser orders a cup of coffee. He notices a sign on the wall reading, "Second Cup of Coffee FREE!" He tells the waiter to give his free cup of coffee to the hobo. |
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==Analysis== |
==Analysis== |
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"Coffee for Two" | |
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Story code | W OS 386-03 |
Story | Carl Barks |
Ink | Carl Barks |
Date | March 1952 |
Pages | 1 |
Layout | 4 rows per page |
Appearances | Uncle Scrooge Hobo Diner waiter |
First publication | Four Color #386 |
"Coffee for Two" is a one-page funny animal comic book gag story. The story was first published in Four Color #386 (March 1952) on the inside back cover in black and white. Issue contents include the 32-page Uncle Scrooge story, Only a Poor Old Man and two other gag stories: "Soupline Eight" and "Osogood Silver Polish". Only a Poor Old Man and the three gag stories have been reprinted many times.
Plot
Coffee for Two stars Uncle Scrooge, and features a hobo and a diner waiter. A hobo idling on a street corner twice asks Uncle Scrooge for a dime to buy a cup of coffee as the old tightwad hurries back and forth about his business. The third time, Scrooge takes the hobo to a diner. The old miser orders a cup of coffee. He notices a sign on the wall reading, "Second Cup of Coffee FREE!" He tells the waiter to give his free cup of coffee to the hobo.
Analysis
Barks's Uncle Scrooge gag stories over the years generally played on the tightwad's stinginess. This gag story however is one of the few that presents Scrooge in a kinder, more generous light. Here, Scrooge is presented as a charitable man concerned about a less fortunate fellow citizen. This presentation is very near to Dickens's philosophy in A Christmas Carol: to offer an unfortunate fellow human being a hand up in the struggle of life.[1]
See also
Notes
- ^ Barks 2010, p. 234.
References
- Grand Comics Database
- Barks, Carl (2012). Walt Disney's Uncle Scrooge: "Only a Poor Old Man". Fantagraphic Books, Inc. pp. 34, 231–235.