The Great Gatsby Dialectical Journal

989 Words2 Pages

"I wish to be left alone," said Scrooge. "Since you ask me what I want, gentlemen, that is my answer. I don't make merry myself at Christmas, and I can't afford to make idle people merry." (pg. 6) To be able to understand Ebenezer scrooge, you must know that in the beginning of his tale, he his incredibly bitter. We see this when two gentlemen come to scrooge's door asking that the scrooge HELP the poor during the winter so that they may have a merry Christmas and not suffer through the cold with nothing to eat and no fire to sit by. The scrooge wishes to know is the union workhouse are still open, along with the Treadmill and the Poor Law, he wishes that people would leave him alone and he thinks the poor should go to the establishments …show more content…

Passages that reveal two different themes (central messages or lessons to be learned) developed within the work. (one of these should be about the poor and how in the beginning Scrooge thinks the poor are worthless and his opinion changes throughout the story, the other should be when it shows his funeral and the only people there are people who came for the free lunch). "Have they no refuge or resources?" cried Scrooge. "Are there no prisons?" said the Spirit, turning on him for the last time with his own words. "Are there no workhouses?" (pg. 49-50) In this passage, Scrooge feels sympathy for two children. He is outraged and asks why they are not taken in. The spirit replies with a quote from Scrooge from earlier in the book. Scrooge was telling two men that he wished to make no donations to the poor, saying they can go live in the prisons or be slaves or die. Here we see the biggest evident change between the Scrooge in the beginner of The Christmas Carol and in the end. We also discover one of the main themes that Dickens reveals. What Scrooge feels for the two wretched children, Ignorance and Want, is sympathy. He feels sympathy and that is what our lesson …show more content…

In Scrooge’s late life he had little friendly communication and he received little in return. When the Ghost of Christmas Future showed Scrooge’s death, Scrooge was terrified. But what I find worse is that when he dies, no one cares. People say that they will go to his funeral out of pity because they know no one else will, or they will go for the free lunch. Although Scrooge was afraid of the thought of this, it was what he deserved. He never made an effort to reach out to people and he also pushed them away. If you don't try you will never

Open Document