The scene changes again and now Scrooge sees his nephew - Fred - at his Christmas party. Fred is in the process of relating to his guests his encounter with Scrooge that very morning, during which ...
Analysis Dickens shows Scrooge's nephew as the opposite of Scrooge. He is able to abandon himself to childish pleasures at Christmas and enjoys the company of his friends. Tiny Tim How does ...
Scrooge finds that life is good, and time is too short, and suddenly you are not there anymore, changing his behavior toward Christmas, Bob, his nephew, and people in general.
“What reason have you to be merry? You’re poor enough,” he tells his nephew. Scrooge is also of the mind that society uses Christmas as an excuse to wrangle money out of wealthy people like ...
The audience watches new actors come and go, and a handful of returnees, like Eddie, who works his way up from Ebenezer Scrooge’s nephew Fred, to Scrooge’s clerk Bob Cratchit to the lead role ...