"Large ghost" is a bit vague. There are four ghosts who appear to Ebeneezer: his former business partner Marley, the Ghost of Christmas Past, the Ghost of Christmas Present, and the Ghost of Christmas Future.
The Ghost of Christmas Past is often popularly depicted as a petite woman.
You may be thinking of the Ghost of Christmas Present who is popularly depicted as a man in robes and a wreath.
The Ghost of Christmas Future has often been portrayed as a reaper, or as the popular image of Death.
In Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol," the Ghost of Christmas Present holds a cornucopia, symbolizing abundance and generosity. Additionally, the spirit is often depicted with a large, overflowing basket filled with food, representing the joy and warmth of the Christmas season. This imagery emphasizes the themes of sharing and compassion that are central to the story.
Scrooge orders a "prize turkey" for Bob Cratchit
Figure of indeterminate age. He had a blazing light on his head. He carried a hat with him.White- robedThe ghost of Christmas past is holding a fresh leaf of holly and an extinguisher cap like for candles.
The Ghost of Christmas Present is a plump, tall, joyful man who carries a torch with him. He is supposed to represent how Christmas is a time of goodness and cheer. When he sprinkles ashes from his torch onto people, they immediately become happy and cheerful. The Ghost of Christmas Past shows how Christmas is a time when everybody gets together and becomes thankful for each other; that they still are alive and that they have a happy life with a good family and money in their pockets.
The Cratchet family was preparing a Christmas goose, but Scrooge had the large turkey at the market delivered to them.
The first, the Ghost of Christmas Past, takes Scrooge to the scenes of childhood and youth which stir the old gentler and tenderer emotions. The second spirit, the Ghost of Christmas Present, takes Scrooge to the home to observe his game of Yes and No and to the humble dwelling of his clerk Bob Cratchit to observe his Christmas dinner. The third spirit, the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come, harrows Scrooge with dire visions of the future if he does not learn and act upon what he has witnessed.
Mrs. Cratchit is worried about the insufficient size of the goose for their Christmas dinner in "A Christmas Carol." She is concerned because the goose is too small to feed their large family, leading to her disappointment and concern about not having enough food.
They went to Christ Mass for most of the day and had a large dinner. The celebrations that we know actually didn't begin until the 1800's with the story the Christmas Carol.
Yes, in "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens, Scrooge promises to donate a large sum of money to help those in need on Christmas Day after his transformation on Christmas Eve. He becomes generous and charitable, wanting to make amends for his past behavior.
IN Victorian London like many large cities of its time there were traders. Many were specialists like butchers, bakers and green grocers.
Described as old yet young looking the Ghost is Scrooges own past. When with Scrooge he takes the old man back to his childhood to see what his own life was like and what may have caused him to be the man he currently was. He makes Scrooge see the positive and negative of his life
According to Wikipedia/Fezziwig: "Mr. and Mrs. Fezziwig are characters featured in Charles Dickens "A Christmas Carol". Mr. Fezziwig is the proprieter of a warehouse business for whom Ebenezer Scrooge worked as an apprentice; and in Stave 2 of The Christmas Carol, has a Christmas ball, where Scrooge meets his love of his life, Belle. The character is a happy man with a large Welsh Wig. Old Fezziwig liked to dance to "Sir Roger de Coverley", a lively tune of the 1800's." Fezziwig has three daughters, "beaming and lovable."