During the month of December scrooge as all grumpy and moody, he is just a mad man who really do not like to be bothered by people. Christmas he does not like the holiday because it is to joy full to him and does not matter to him. Scrooge as terrible person when it comes to being joyful. Scrooge tells a lot of people to leave him alone and also, his quote is ¨good afternoon¨, he always say. People get on with there lives as what he say. I should be alone and do not bother me, these holidays are pointless to me. There is no meaning of these such things. His nephew always wants scrooge to be happy and a lot of the time it does not work and usually makes him mad. His workers are scared of him because of the way he talks to them and a way, but mostly nobody likes him in some ways because of his mood and anger. Little kids were singing and he walks up to them and stares at them. He yells at them and tell them to get on some were and do not come back. His nephew always say come on uncle you should come and have dinner with me and my family.. …show more content…
Then his closet door was making noises and that made him waste his cup of tea and that stopped for a while. Then it started again then stopped, next thing you know a ghostly spirit appeared and spoke loudly and scared scrooge to death and made him not believe the he was real. The spirit proved to scrooge that he was real and explain what while happen later that week. That three other spirits may come and visit him and take him into the past to show how he was and what made him the way he is
Dickens displays guilt as the main form of how Scrooge’s character develops into a compassionate person by the end of the novella. As Scrooge feels this quilt, it's purely based on the visions that the ghosts provide which further causes Scrooge to realise the consequences of his actions. His alienation from specific characters that he used to love such as Belle, “...has displaced me…” whom left Scrooge, due to his desire for money and wealth which grew. This desire grows with him as he is rejecting the christmas joy and spirit as he continuously states that Christmas is a “humbug,” but by stating this it provides comparison. Dickens depicts that Scrooge has become a better person because of fear but in the end he has become kinder. As the
Scrooge was and owner of a factory and made a whole bunch of money, but he did not care about anyone else. “Merry Christmas said his nephew, what right do have to be merry you are poor enough”. This shows that scrooge is mean to family and does not care about Christmas.
The first reason he said what he said is because of what the Spirit of Christmas Past said to him. One of the first things he showed him was when he went to a party with his girlfriend and proposed marriage. She said yes. This was before he was greedy and mean. This showed him that being pleasant and kind pays off. The spirit then shows Scrooge another part of his past, where his wife
In the beginning of the play in spite of being selfish Scrooge is also cheap, cold-hearted, and cruel. Scrooge behaves in this manner to his nephew, Fred. One way of proving this is when Fred said “Merry Christmas.” Scrooge replied salty saying “Humbug Christmas is just a time for spending and wasting money.” Not only he treats Fred badly but many more people. For instance take one of his quotes towards the Gentleman Visitor, “Are there no Jails for the poor, are there no
According to the text, Scrooge is such a miser that when his partner, Jacob Marley passed away, he didn’t spend the money to change the business sign outside their production to reflect his partner’s death, instead he left the sign to swing alone mysteriously camouflaging Marley’s passing. In the reading, his nephew, Fred, comes to invite Scrooge to Christmas dinner with his family, Scrooge, in turn responds, “Bah! Humbug! The text describes Scrooge as a tight-fisted hand at the grindstone. Based on what I have read in the text, foreign heat and cold had little influence on Scrooge, he was a man whom felt no warmth or wintry climate, even the winds of the winter chill did not affect his inner self or his outermost surroundings. The text states that Scrooge is all head, no heart, a miserable, bitter old miser.
In the play, Mr. Scrooge is a greedy man who thinks Christmas is “Bah Humbug!” (Dickens 3). His family has always wanted him to join them for a Christmas feast, but Mr. Scrooge has never wanted anything to do with Christmas. Marley, Mr. Scrooge’s old business partner, didn’t want Mr. Scrooge to end up like him with chains of greed attached to him when he died, so he sent Mr. Scrooge three spirits: Christmas Past, Present, and Future.
Scrooge was always mean to everyone. They did not like him. He was visited by three ghosts that taught him a lesson. He started being nice. “Scrooge was better than his word. He did it all. . . He was a second father. . . [to Tiny Tim] His own heart laughed.” (Dickens 64). Doing nice things for people can make people happier too. The Grinch, as well as Scrooge, hates Christmas and he expresses it. The Whos hate him for it. He takes the presents of all the Whos, he is about to throw it off the mountain. The Grinch hears a sound. It is them. They are singing, despite the fact their Christmas is ruined. He returned all their gifts and celebrates Christmas with them. He is finally loved by the Whos. Doing nice things for people can make a person happy as well. Although, Scrooge was helped by spirits, The Grinch was held by people. Recent books can be seen using traditional story’s themes.
On page 32, it shows how he is isolated in this quote “No beggars implored him to bestow a trifle, no children asked him what o’clock it is, no woman or man ever asked the way to such and such a place of Scrooge.” People isolate themselves from him, and he is not an approachable person. No body wants to interact with him, so this shows how others stay away from him, making him isolated. Scrooge isn’t a friendly person and people are afraid of approaching and talking to him, so he remains isolated. He doesn 't care what other people think and he wants to be detached from the rest of humanity. Another quote that shows his detachment is, “Warning all human sympathy to keep its distance.” Page 32. Scrooge doesn 't want anyone’s sympathy, and wants to keep to himself. He doesn 't want to talk to anyone, and doesn 't care what anyone else thinks. This is showing how he lives a solitary life because he doesn 't want to talk to anyone or hear his or her opinions, or even interact at all. He likes living by himself, detached from humanity and he contributes to his isolation by not talking to anyone. He makes others not want to talk to them and he doesn 't care what they think or say. He will not give sympathy to others either. Another final quote that shows how he doesn 't want to be a part of the rest of humanity and how he isolates himself is on
During the story, Scrooge is visited by the Ghosts from Christmas past, present, and future, who shows the ill-tempered Scrooge how to be feel compassion towards others human beings. A large quantity of the story revolves around money, and it plays a large role, to contrast how generosity is viewed in society. Scrooge is incredibly wealthy, as he lives a l...
his guests played. In a way this is when Scrooge began to realize that the
He is like Victor and chooses to be isolated for how he treated others. For example, Scrooge says, “I wish to be left alone. Since you ask me what I wish, gentlemen, that is my answer. I don’t make merry myself at Christmas, and I can’t afford to make idle people merry” (Dickens 16). Scrooge is showing the reader that he is an ungrateful and a non-friendly man. The author wants us to know that he has no Christmas sprit and is selfish man that is also very stingy with his money. He also is rude to the people that come to his store. Charles Dickens describes him in A Christmas Carol as “a squeezing, wrenching, grasping, clutching, covetous old sinner! Hard and sharp as flint, from which no steel has ever struck generous fire; secret, and self contained, and solitary as an oyster” (Dickens 12). This description of Scrooge shows that he is a very negative person, that chooses to isolate himself, and keeps things all to himself. He does not care about anyone other than money and himself. He loves money and also watching his clerk; “the door of Scrooge’s counting-house was open that he might keep his eye upon his clerk” (Dickens 13). Scrooge was always watching what his clerk was doing; he was not a friendly guy. There is an example of this in Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein also, where Victor was being watched constantly by the monster, everything victor did the monster was watching. Scrooge
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.
An example of this is shown in his bitter attitude towards the cheerfulness of his nephew Fred and by thinking Christmas a "humbug." And then, moments before he bitterly declines his nephew's friendly invitation to come dine with him, he says crossly to him, "'Every idiot who goes about with 'Merry Christmas' on his lips, should be boiled with his own pudding, and buried with a stake of holly through his heart.'" Lastly, an instance that illustrates the cold heart of Scrooge is when he speaks of the poor, "'If they would rather die, they better do it, and decrease the surplus population.'" By these demonstrations, Scrooge exposed the coldness of his own
Scrooge, a dull, hateful hoary miserable, miser that is always grumpy, doesn’t like anything to do with happiness or joy. According to the text, he has a frosty rime on his head, thin lips blue that spoke shrewdly in a grating voice. Scrooge has a pointed nose with shriveled cheeks. The text refers to him as “bitterer than any wind that blew and no warmth could warm, no wintry weather could chill him.” In the first part of the story, one night a ghost appears in his house, he turns out to be his deceased aged work partners ghost, Marley. According to the text, Scrooge questions Marley about why spirits walk the earth and why they are coming to him. Marley answers him with “ It is required of every man, that the spirit within him should walk
Meeting the Ghost of Christmas Past begins the first stage of Scrooge’s transformation: regretting his actions. When Scrooge is shown his younger self alone in his classroom on Christmas, he regrets chasing a Christmas caroler away from his door. The Spirit skips ahead a few years to show him a happier time. His sweet little sister Fan arrives to take him home, and this is his first Christmas in a long time that is spent with family. Unfortunately, Scrooge doesn’t see it that way; seeing this scene makes him “uneasy in his mind” as he thinks about the way he treats his nephew Fred. Instead of treating him like his only family member, Scrooge denies invitations to Christmas dinner every year and is rude whenever Fred speaks to him. He doesn’t have time to dwell on this for long, however; Scrooge has many other important things to think...