Scrooge acts very willing to learn in the middle of the story. He is ready for each of the spirits to teach him his lesson. He is also very regretful for all he has done. I'm doing something quite similiar and I hoped this helped. I would have added more but I have to go! Did you read the book?!
Scrooge became generous and loving to his fellow men.
The person that is masculine singular in "A Christmas Carol: Scrooge and Marley Act II" is Ebenezer Scrooge. He is the main character and is portrayed as a miserly and selfish man at the beginning of the story.
Raising Ebenezer symbolizes a turning point or moment of redemption in the story. It signifies a commitment to change and a new beginning. In the context of the story, it represents a shift towards a better future and a chance for personal growth and transformation.
The story is not in acts but in Staves. In Stave three, Scrooge encounters the Ghost of Christmas Present. The Ghost takes him through the "Christmas" or year that is current up to that very Christmas Eve and shows him lives of those he touch upon through that year but also brought about a wanting regarding Need and Ignorance of mankind and the outcome for everyone if these issues were not faced.
Marley's speech in Act One of "A Christmas Carol" serves to warn Scrooge about the consequences of his selfish and greedy ways. Marley's ghost appears to deliver a message of redemption and urge Scrooge to change his behavior before it's too late. The speech sets the tone for the rest of the story by introducing the theme of repentance and transformation.
In the main scrooge remembered both good and bad experiences and was starting to see see why he was like he was
He started to Relize how much he used to be a complete...jerk...and he turned his ways and became nicer and actually started celebrating Christmas and being more happy and stuff. Trust me I've seen the movie wit my ffamily during movie night.
Jacob Marley is the very first ghost to visit Scrooge early in the production to set the scene for the remaining visitations
Ebenezer Miller Wells has written: 'Wells' guide to legal labels in compliance with the Food and Drugs Act, June 30, 1906' -- subject(s): Labels (Pharmacy)
In the living world, Ebenezer Scrooge's equally greedy partner. Marley died seven years before the narrative opens. He appears to Scrooge as a ghost condemned to wander the world bound in heavy chains. Marley hopes to save his old partner from suffering a similar fate.
In Act II of "A Christmas Carol," Old Joe buys the bed curtains, bedposts, and bedclothes from the two women and the man who are selling stolen items they took from Scrooge after he died. They consider these items as their right to take given that Scrooge is no longer around to use them.
Fan Scrooge died giving birth to Scrooge's nephew, Fred. Her death left Scrooge devastated and he blamed himself for not taking better care of her. This guilt and grief contributed to his subsequent transformation into the miserly character we see in "A Christmas Carol."