English, asked by RidhiG19, 1 year ago

Pl tell the Character sketch of Ebenezer Scrooge (after transformation)..
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Answers

Answered by woonnaamith
7

Answer:

Explanation:

Imagine if the cruelest person in the world became the kindest. This happens in A Christmas Carol after Ebenezer Scrooge is taken on a remarkable journey through time. Although A Christmas Carol was written in the 17th century, its messages and themes stay alive today. Scrooge started changing his personality and life-style throughout the novella. In A Christmas Carol Scrooge changed from being a money-pinching grouch to a kind-hearted man, he redeemed himself through freewill and life changing memories. After Marley visited Scrooge, The Ghost of Christmas Past soared across the sky and came into Scrooge’s home. It showed Scrooge different memories of his past, a couple memories in particular got Scrooge to regret the choices he had …show more content…  

After only one ghost, Scrooge had already changed his view on how he should treat people he is close to. Once The Ghost of Christmas Present was extinguished, The Ghost of Christmas Present waited for Scrooge on a pile of delicious food in Scrooge’s house. This ghost also brings Scrooge around the town, they visited Christmas dinners and parties. First, the ghost brings Scrooge to the Cratchit family Christmas dinner. The family has a wonderful time despite the fact that they have a goose instead of a turkey, they have a dying son, and they are poor. If even through the roughest times this family can stay happy, then Scrooge should be able to celebrate Christmas. After Scrooge goes to the Cratchit’s he is taken to Fred’s Christmas Party. Scrooge is pulled in by the fun games, and he starts playing along with them. Although no one can actually see him, Scrooge finds himself having a good time with other people. By this time Scrooge has definitely had a change of heart. He finally decides that having a good Christmas spirit might be a wonderful thing. After The Ghost of Christmas Present left, Scrooge was struck with fear when the next ghost comes in his direction. Scrooge had been wondering the whole adventure whether he could still change the person he was. The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come brought him to different places, all of them relating to a dead man Scrooge had seen earlier.


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woonnaamith: yes
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Answered by Anonymous
5

Ebenezer Scrooge, a miserly, cold-hearted owner of a London counting-house, continues his stingy, greedy ways on Christmas Eve. Later on that evening, Scrooge receives a chilling visitation from the ghost of his dead partner, Jacob Marley. Marley informs Scrooge that three spirits will visit him during the next three nights. Scrooge has one last chance of redemption, he can either embrace the joy of Christmas or end up like his fellow dead business partner, according to the spirits. Dickens’ novella is not a religious telling of the story of Christmas, but it does talk about the ability of a person to transform one’s life by changing the way they treat their neighbor.

At the start of the book, Scrooge is portrayed as an unfeeling, cruel character which is shown when he tells the charity workers that if the poor would rather die than go to a workhouse, “then they had better do it, and decrease the surplus population”. Scrooge represents the Victorian rich who neglect the poor and think only of their own well-being. Pathetic fallacy is used to represent Scrooge’s change: In Stave One, the weather is described as being “Foggier yet, and colder. Piercing, searching, biting cold”. This represents how cold and iron-hearted Scrooge was at the beginning of the book. Repetition is another key technique used to dramatically describe scrooge’s character. A word repeated many times in the first few paragraphs is “dead” with this an instant negative mood is brought upon the reader. Dickens creates the sense that Scrooge was isolated, “Secret and self-contained, and as solitary as an oyster.” Scrooge would not even let a single penny slip through his hand, regardless of how wealthy he was. A miserly and mean character who only cares about money.

Described as a “squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping, clutching, covetous old sinner!”In the final Stave, Scrooge has become a lot more emotional and charitable. You can see this as he uses more affectionate terms such as “my dear” and “my love” and as he says that “the time before him was his own, to make amends in!” when he wakes up. The spirits have really played a massive role in transforming his character. In Stave Five, the weather is “clear, bright, jovial” with “Golden sunlight”. This change in weather represents how Scrooge has become a lot kinder and more generous. This again, is an example of pathetic fallacy. Scrooge is a changed man. Here is a word repeated often in the last stave “chuckle”. This is a cheerful and enthusiastic word that fits in with scrooge’s new change of character. It makes the reader feel that scrooge is now a humorous person, which he never was before. He repents for all his previous sins by giving Bob a raise, atoning for his previous bitterness toward his clerk, he apologizes to the portly gentleman he meets on the street and pledges lavish contributions for his charity, where in Stave One he threw him out of his counting-house.

Scrooge also happily attends Fred’s party.In conclusion, the moral behind Christmas carol is that in a social divided community it is important to treat everyone with equality. This is shown through scrooge’s character, and how he treats people somewhat below him in the social hierarchy as a man quite high in society and how he treats them after he has been visited by the spirits. The moral is still of relevance to today’s world, although there is a large time difference between now and then there still are social divides throughout society. Dickens uses a variety of techniques to make this book have a great impact on the reader.

Hope this helps you friend......

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RidhiG19: from google..right?
Anonymous: yep
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