He takes the lamp extinguisher from the Ghosts hands, places it over the flame coming from the ghosts head and brings the extinguisher down. This extinguishes the life flame of the spirit
In "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens, Ebenezer Scrooge extinguishes the Ghost of Christmas Past by grabbing the extinguisher cap on the ghost's head and putting it back on, effectively putting out the light and sending the spirit away.
In Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol," Scrooge gets rid of the ghost of Christmas Yet to Come by expressing remorse and a willingness to change his ways. He pleads with the spirit to show him a glimpse of hope and redemption, promising to honor the spirit of Christmas in his heart. The ghost then shows Scrooge a vision of his own lonely death and the impact of his greed on those around him. This experience prompts Scrooge to transform his life, becoming a generous and kind-hearted person who embodies the true spirit of Christmas.
Scrooge tries to put out the light by, putting an extinguisher cap on it and in the book and in the movies he does not succeed. The light symbolizes the truth which is why he can't get rid of the light because you can never extinguish the truth.
he pulled the covers over his head.
A Christmas Carol takes place in London during the early 1840s. The story begins at 3 pm, December 24, in the counting house of Ebenezer Scrooge and Jacob Marley. Marley died seven years ago, but Scrooge has not removed his name from the business sign. It is bitterly cold outside, and in the counting house as well because Scrooge does not want to spend money for heat. His only nephew comes in to wish him a Merry Christmas and to invite him to a Christmas party, but Scrooge refuses the invitation and gets rid of his nephew as quickly as possible.
A Christmas Carol takes place in London during the early 1840s. The story begins at 3 pm, December 24, in the counting house of Ebenezer Scrooge and Jacob Marley. Marley died seven years ago, but Scrooge has not removed his name from the business sign. It is bitterly cold outside, and in the counting house as well because Scrooge does not want to spend money for heat. His only nephew comes in to wish him a Merry Christmas and to invite him to a Christmas party, but Scrooge refuses the invitation and gets rid of his nephew as quickly as possible.
The past participle is rid.
rid. Present, past and past participle are the same - rid/rid/rid
As ghost have no existence nor do spells the question is pointless.
Get a priest o_o
No spells get rid of ghost. Ghosts are not real and spells are not real.
hey I'm Alex and you said u want to know how to get rid of ghost well you really can't get rid of ghosts at all and i know i ton about ghost if u have a question ask me