From a miserable, misanthropic miser, Scrooge becomes a warm and generous and affectionate man. This change is a result of his experiences on Christmas Eve when the three Spirits visited him.
In Stave 2, Scrooge regrets not speaking kindly to Bob Cratchit
He changes from a grim, heartless, selfish old devil to the very soul of kindness and generosity.
He finally realises that despite all his welsth and misery he inflicts he will if he does not change die a lonely, poor man doomed to walk the earth forever in torment
In Stave 4, The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come takes Scrooge to: The Corn Exchange Old Joe's beetling shop Scrooge's bedroom Caroline's and her husband's rented home Through the London street to Bob Cratchit's home Then to Scrooge's old office but now used by someone else To the graveyard where Scrooge's headstone lay
Grumpy
In Stave 2, Scrooge regrets not speaking kindly to Bob Cratchit
IN Stave one he is in shock to see what he though was Marleys face appear on the brass door knocker. This was the starting point for what was to come. In the stave 5 Scrooge checks the knocker does not change meaning Marley was not coming back to haunt him
In Stave One of "A Christmas Carol," the major event is the visitation of Marley's ghost to Ebenezer Scrooge. Marley's ghost warns Scrooge about his greedy ways and foretells the arrival of three other spirits who will help to change his ways.
In Stave 4 of A Christmas Carol, Scrooge visits multiple locations with the Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come, including the home of a deceased pawnbroker, a graveyard, and the Cratchit household. This stave focuses on the impact of his actions on those around him and the consequences of his behavior.
The ghost of Scrooge's former business partner, Jacob Marley, visits Scrooge in Stave 1 of "A Christmas Carol." Marley warns Scrooge about the consequences of his selfish and greedy ways.
He changes from a grim, heartless, selfish old devil to the very soul of kindness and generosity.
he rebukes them initially then following his change of heart in the later stave he offers a small donation for their singing
He promises to change his cold-hearted ways and keep Christmas in his heart from that day onward.
A Turkey in Stave 5
The Ghost of Christmas Present
The ghost in Stave One of "A Christmas Carol" is Jacob Marley, the former business partner of Ebenezer Scrooge. He appears to warn Scrooge of the consequences of his greed and selfishness.
This was in stave five when he work to find that the Ghost had accepted his oath to change and he was still alive