Scrooge's office is dark, cold, and uninviting, reflecting his miserly and solitary nature. It is sparsely furnished with a small, rickety desk and a few essential items, lacking any warmth or comfort. The atmosphere is dreary, filled with the sounds of the ticking clock and the hustle of the outside world, emphasizing Scrooge's isolation and disdain for joy and generosity. Overall, it embodies his character—stingy, unwelcoming, and devoid of cheer.
fireplace
The visit by the nephew and two gentleness to scrooges office, Marley's visit, each of the ghosts visits thereafter scrooges change of heart to keep Christmas in his heart ever after
The Ghost of Chrsitmas Yet to come To the Corn Exchange Old Joes ' beetling shop Scrooges bedroom Caroline and her husbands rented home Through the London street to Bob Cratchits home Then to Scrooges old office but now used by someone else To the grave yard where Scrooges headstone lay
The Ghost of Chrsitmas Yet to come takes Scrooge; To the Corn Exchange Old Joes ' beetling shop Scrooges bedroom Caroline and her husbands rented home Through the London streets to Bob Cratchits home Then to Scrooges old office but now used by someone else To the grave yard where Scrooges headstone lay
Both seek not to like Christmas but change
There is not mention of the street where Scrooges offices is sited. However, because of descriptions and references of land marks in the story it has been estimated that the office is near Cornhill in central london
The Ghost of Chrsitmas Yet to come goes with Scrooge To the Corn Exchange Old Joes ' beetling shop Scrooges bedroom Caroline and her husbands rented home Through the London street to Bob Cratchits home Then to Scrooges old office but now used by someone else To the grave yard where Scrooges headstone lay
It was Belles husband (Belle was Scrooges former fiancee )
It was Belle
Ebenezer
Belle
Scrooge's nephew, Fred, lived in a house in a pleasant part of the city, likely not too far from Scrooge's office. He invited Scrooge to his Christmas dinner every year despite his uncle's curmudgeonly behavior.