Marley's purpose is to begin the saga of the three spirits that visit Scrooge. Marley is also there to explain to Scrooge his bad deeds and wrong doings and warn him of the terrible fate that will come if he does not change his ways, such as when he informs Scrooge on his "ponderous chain" he has forged, he says, "The weight and length of the coil you bear yourself? It was full and heavy as this, seven Christmas Eves ago. You have labored on it since." Marley was also Scrooge's only friend and now that he died, the reader is shown Scrooge's loneliness.
Marley's purpose is to begin the saga of the three spirits that visit Scrooge. Marley is also there to explain to Scrooge his bad deeds and wrong doings and warn him of the terrible fate that will come if he does not change his ways, such as when he informs Scrooge on his "ponderous chain" he has forged, he says, "The weight and length of the coil you bear yourself? It was full and heavy as this, seven Christmas Eves ago. You have labored on it since." Marley was also Scrooge's only friend and now that he died, the reader is shown Scrooge's loneliness.
A Christmas Carol
In Charles Dickens' book "A Christmas Carol", it is not stated just how Scrooge's business partner, Jacob Marley died. All that is known is that he died seven years prior to the events of the story.
Marley appears in the story "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens as the ghost of Jacob Marley, who visits Ebenezer Scrooge to warn him of his impending fate if he does not change his ways. He appears in Stave 1 of the novella.
Marley's purpose in the story "A Christmas Carol" was to warn Scrooge about the consequences of his selfish and greedy ways. Through Marley's haunting, Scrooge is given a chance to change his life before it's too late, thus serving as a catalyst for Scrooge's redemption and transformation.
Scrooge's business partner in Disney's A Christmas Carol is named Jacob Marley. He is the one who appears to Scrooge as a ghost to warn him about the consequences of his selfish ways.
Jacob Marley is a fictional character from Charles Dickens' novel "A Christmas Carol," and his date of death is not specified in the story.
In the story "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens, Jacob Marley was dead for seven years before appearing to Scrooge as a ghost.
Jacob Marley died from unknown causes, but the story suggests he led a selfish and materialistic life, focusing only on greed and profit. He is said to have died before the events of "A Christmas Carol" take place.
In the original story a church is mentioned and this is reference to Marley's burial and it is St Paul's Church.
There is no character named Marely in the story "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens. However, there is a character named Jacob Marley, who is the deceased business partner of Ebenezer Scrooge and plays a significant role in the story as a ghost who visits Scrooge.
Dickens would not have had a purpose to create a ghost that did not speak in a Christmas carol. His story was based on the ghost of Christmas past, and therefore needed to speak in Christmas carols and hymns.
The first is the ghost of his former partner, Jacob Marley. He is then visited by the ghosts of Christmas past, present, and future.