The ghost takes Scrooge to the Corn Exchange - Here Scrooge would have been seen on a daily bases in his familiar place. On his visit with the ghost Scrooge hears business men speak of a sudden death and asking what will happen to the deceased properties. The ghost does not get involved in any discussion throughout his visitation to Scrooge
To the future, Scrooge's future, but the ghost of Christmas future really doesn't talk, just pointed, but Scrooge new his future was screwed. At the end he did survive.
Scrooge feared the ghost of "Things Yet To Come" the most in this novel because the ghost wore all black, and did not talk, only verbally with the point of his finger. Also the ghost showed him terrifying things such as his death, and his funeral.
Nope, sorry.
Scrooge feared the ghost of "Things Yet To Come" the most in this novel because the ghost wore all black, and did not talk, only verbally with the point of his finger. Also the ghost showed him terrifying things such as his death, and his funeral.
Marley appeared to Scrooge in several places, but all were at his house. The first glimpse Scrooge gets is in the doorknocker, and then in several places in his room, and finally Marley appears in full body, floating through the locked door to talk to him.
Talk to the ghost any way you want to; it won't complain.
Unknown. You may be able to talk to a ghost, but this is not verified.
In the first staves they talk of their dislike of the misery old man. However, in the fifth stave we hear of their surprise at the sudden death of Scrooge and vague actions are asked of who will be his beneficiaries as he makes it clear Fred not welcome.
yes you can talk to a ghost if you concentrate but sometimes yo are just born with those powers
Not Oprah Winfrey, she was just the first black women to have a long running program, who really had a talk show was Della Reese in the 60's, she is considered the first black woman to have a talk show...do the research!
Every ghost is different; some talk incessantly while others never talk at all.
Scrooge and the Ghost arrive just as the party on Christmas Eve has finished dinner, and the guests are enjoying some after-dinner talk. Scrooge overhears his nephew express his opinion of Scrooge -- a feeling not of anger, but of pity, pointing out that his ill-temper hurts nobody but himself. The party then goes into music, followed by a game of blind-man's bluff, and then the Victorian game "How, When, and Where." It ended with a game of "Yes or No," similar to our present game of "20 Questions." The nephew Fred says he is thinking of an animal who lives in London, and eventually his sister figures out it is Scrooge.