IT would have been around the age of 12 years which its estimated wa about 50 years before his ghostly visits
In Stave 2 of "A Christmas Carol," the Ghost of Christmas Past takes Scrooge on a journey to his past Christmases, including his childhood and early adulthood. Scrooge reflects on his loneliness and how he pushed away those who cared about him. The spirit shows Scrooge memories that evoke both joy and sorrow, prompting him to reflect on the choices he made that led him to his current state of isolation and bitterness.
His experiances with the three ghosts tell him what he is missing in life, how he can help others and what will happen to him that very Christmas eve should he not make the chages required of him
Time is important to Scrooge because he has realized the value of living in the present moment and the opportunity to make amends for his past mistakes. He is grateful for the chance to change his ways and live a more fulfilling life with the time he has left.
The past perfect tense is had chosen.
No, it is not possible for God to change the past. The past is already fixed and cannot be altered.
IT would have been around the age of 12 years which its estimated wa about 50 years before his ghostly visits
It would have gone back to his early childhold circa 50 years
stop cheating y'all
The Ghost of Chrsitmas Past (Scrooges Past)
Treated Bob better
This refers to Belle who he promised to marry but that promise goes un kept as Scrooges love turns to money
Scrooge saw a procession of ghosts led by the Ghost of Christmas Past when his curtains were open in Stave Two. The ghost showed Scrooge visions of his past Christmases and memories to teach him important lessons.
The light represents a way of light up the errors of scrooges past life so he can see them
the purpose was to call scrooges attention to warn him that the ghosts were coming the ones from his past, present, and future.
This was a lamp extinguisher. It was simpley there to put out the light which lit up Scrooges dark past
None, as A Christmas Carol isn't written in chapters, it is written in Staves. There are five staves in 'A Christmas Carol' to mimic the fact that it is a Carol. The stave titles are below... Stave I/Stave 1=Marley's Ghost Stave II/Stave 2=The First of The Three Spirits Stave III/Stave 3=The Second of The Three Spirits Stave IV/Stave 4=The Last of The Three Spirits Stave V/Stave 5=The End of it
This refers to the ghost of Christmas past who sees scrooges reaction to the way Fezziwig treats his staff