Ghosts In A Christmas Carol

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In the Novella A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, Ebenezer Scrooge is an old man who despises Christmas with all of his frigid heart. Three spirits come to his aid to have an intervention about his hatred for Christmas, and will try to change him into a merry man. In the Novella A Christmas Carol of the three spirits the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come is the most influential. The other two ghosts have an impact but the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come is the final nail in the coffin of Scrooge’s austere heart. One example of this is when the ghost of Christmas Yet to Come shows Scrooge the dead body that is lying in this room that looks similar to Scrooge’s own. Scrooge says “ This isn’t my room it just looks similar” (Dickens 19), but …show more content…

Marley showed Scrooge a sense of fear, a fear of becoming what Marley has become. Marley gave him an ultimatum basically; change or become the thing that Marley has become. An apparition that roams the earth seeing the wrongs that people do, but is helpless to save them from the hell they are approaching. The final nail in the coffin, literally was when the ghost of Christmas Yet to Come is when Scrooge was shown his own grave. Lighting crashed and Scrooge screamed in absolute terror at the sight of his name on this haunting headstone. They say never walk over a grave, but what if it was your own? Well Scrooge didn’t want to find out when he “ I beg you spirit take me back! No more please! Mercy!” (Dickens 21). In summation the Novella A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, Ebenezer Scrooge was an unhappy man who was given the chance to change. The ghost that prompted this the most was the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come. The ghosts all showed us something different about Scrooge, but the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come was literally the final nail in the coffin of Scrooge’s humbuginess! In the end Scrooge was a changed man, who was more merry than could be. He never again question the spirit of

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