Now (at the end of the book) he is a reformed man. He takes time to keep Christmas in is heart
Ebenezer Scrooge is typically portrayed as a changed character after his experiences with the Ghosts of Christmas in Charles Dickens' novel "A Christmas Carol." He becomes generous, kind-hearted, and compassionate towards others, embodying the spirit of Christmas.
He is elated; He is still alive and has see the error of his ways and now can make good on the oath he made to change
The name Ebenezer comes from the Hebrew language and means "stone of help." In A Christmas Carol, the name Ebenezer Scrooge symbolizes that Scrooge is in need of help or redemption to change his ways and find joy and compassion in his heart.
scrooge now is alive and Marley was death for seven year ago.
It tells us he was like SCrooge in his ways but had now seen the error of his ways and although he cound not go back and make changes that he had learned enough about helping others to warn Scrooge
A Huge Scrooge
Mr. Fezziwig was his boss. Marley was later Scrooge's partner. When he sees himself in the past he said if he owned a business someday he would treat his people like Fezziwig did. Look at him now. He forgot and he didn't treat them like he said he would.
Mr. Fezziwig was his boss. Marley was later Scrooge's partner. When he sees himself in the past he said if he owned a business someday he would treat his people like Fezziwig did. Look at him now. He forgot and he didn't treat them like he said he would
We now see that Scrooge was all but abandoned by his father at boarding school even at christmas
Scrooge sees what Christmas is like for people that are around him at the time, he also sees Tiny Tim Cratchit and is shocked to hear that he was life limited and would not see another Christmas - Now Scrooge starts to understand the true meaning of Christmas
No. To quote from the story itself (with respect to Scrooge's lodgings): "It was old enough now, and dreary enough, for no one lived in it but Scrooge, the other rooms being all let out as offices."
Scrooge did not like Christmas in A Christmas Carol.
Scrooge and Marley. Even after Marley died. Quote from the etext: "Scrooge never painted out Old Marley's name. There it stood, years afterwards, above the warehouse door: Scrooge and Marley. The firm was known as Scrooge and Marley."