Initially Scrooge sees money as the sign of a successful man without it he would not be respected - His mind and attitude change through the visitations foretold by Marley and he is considered to be better than his word keeping Christmas is his heart and having mankind as his business thereafter
At the beginning of the play, Scrooge views money as the most important thing in life, and he is greedy and selfish. By the end of the play, after being visited by the spirits, Scrooge learns the value of compassion, generosity, and human connection over money. He transforms into a caring and giving person who prioritizes the well-being of others over wealth.
As he moves in to adulthood he sees money as the root to prove success and happiness. By the tales end he sees that this is not true and that wealth can be spread amid others to ease their misfortune and achieve greater happiness
Remove it from view as it is the final part of the story and one finalchance to change or suffer eternal torment
He showed Scrooge some of the reasons that had clouded his view of life, love and Christmas
A prefix, such as "pre" added to "view" to create "preview".
Basically they are poles apart. Scrooge has grown into a miserly cold hearted ignorant old man and his former employer showed a business attitude coupled with a warm friendly humanitarian view
Before his change, they thought he was a greedy, selfish, uncheerful, and "Humbug!" man. Everyone hates him. After his change(after the visit of the spirits), everyone saw him as a generous, cheerful, unselfish, merry man! Everyone loves him now!
The teleological view of history.
He is shown his own lonely history which has effected his view of Christmas, never having grown in family environment at Christmas. He learns this and that he cannot change the history only the future. With the ghost of Christmas present his eyes are opened when he learns about the scale of want around him and ignorance of those who could do something , even small that can help those in dire need.
The View
This quote suggests that Scrooge only cared about being respected and valued by others in terms of his business success and wealth. It implies that his worth and respect were solely tied to his business achievements, rather than his character or actions as a person.
It was originally Marley's but the miserly Scrooge took ownership after Marley's death. Marley was opposite in his attitude to scrooge regarding spending money. He had a lavish lifestyle and the house was considered a town house in London which would have been expensive. When taking it over Scrooge broke the house in to apartments and a cellar in to a storage area for a wine merchant - he kept one apartment for himself and rented the rest out