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The Christmas Carol Essay

Decent Essays

Sometimes a non-fiction book can have relative applications and stories in it, but a fiction book can achieve the same purpose with adding some exaggeration to further support the meaning of the story. The Christmas Carol, written by Charles Dickens, is a fiction story, but it contains a lot of meaning to the outlook on life. The battle between the flesh and the soul adds emphasis on the morals of the human being. Developing the story is an important aspect as well, whether the development is in the conflict, within the characters or the resolution. Inside the conflict, the conflict can either be internal or external. External being the fight between two men, and internal being the conflict within yourself. The Conflict in The Christmas Carol …show more content…

The first set of patterns in this story are the sets of ghosts that visit Scrooge. At first when the ghost of Marley appears, it is a shock to Scrooge, and as the story continues, Scrooge seems to acclimate to the pattern of the ghosts emerge. For example, when Scrooge first saw the ghost of Marley, Scrooge was in complete shock. As this story moved on each ghost tried to tell a lesson to Scrooge by either going in the past, present, or future. Once Scrooge is shown the awful things that he has done in both the past and present, he soon realizes that he lives lifestyle of greed is the corrupt way of life. The second pattern in this book is the convictions that Scrooge has. All of the Ghosts attempt to show Scrooge something that might change his ways, starting with the Ghost of Christmas Past. This spirit goes back in time to show Scrooge a time in his life that still haunted him to that day; this event sparked his initiative to change. The next spirit, the Ghost of Christmas Present, revealed to Scrooge what his family members thought of him and the current state of Tiny Tim. Lastly, The Ghost of Christmas Future exposed the death of Tiny Tim and Scrooge himself. All of these patterns develop as the story goes on and as the different spirits are presented, each pattern ultimately leads to the intervention of Scrooge’s attitude of

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