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WIKIBOOKS
DISPONIBILI
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ART
- Great Painters
BUSINESS&LAW
- Accounting
- Fundamentals of Law
- Marketing
- Shorthand
CARS
- Concept Cars
GAMES&SPORT
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COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY
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EDUCATION
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SCIENCE
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LIFESTYLE
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TRADITIONS
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NATURE
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ARTICLES IN THE BOOK

  1. A Christmas Carol
  2. Advent
  3. Advent calendar
  4. Advent wreath
  5. Aguinaldo
  6. Ashen faggot
  7. Belsnickel
  8. Bethlehem
  9. Biblical Magi
  10. Black Friday
  11. Boxing Day
  12. Bubble light
  13. Buche de Noël
  14. Burgermeister Meisterburger
  15. Caganer
  16. Candy cane
  17. Christkind
  18. Christmas cake
  19. Christmas card
  20. Christmas carol
  21. Christmas cracker
  22. Christmas dinner
  23. Christmas Eve
  24. Christmas flowers
  25. Christmas gift-bringers around the world
  26. Christmas lights
  27. Christmas market
  28. Christmas music
  29. Christmas number one
  30. Christmas ornament
  31. Christmas pickle
  32. Christmas pudding
  33. Christmas pyramid
  34. Christmas seal
  35. Christmas stamp
  36. Christmas stocking
  37. Christmas stories
  38. Christmastide
  39. Christmas traditions
  40. Christmas trees
  41. Christmas village
  42. Christmas worldwide
  43. Companions of Saint Nicholas
  44. Cranberry sauce
  45. David Zancai
  46. Ded Moroz
  47. Ebenezer Scrooge
  48. Eggnog
  49. Elf
  50. Epiphany
  51. Father Christmas
  52. Frosty the Snowman
  53. Fruitcake
  54. Ghost of Christmas Past
  55. Ghost of Christmas Present
  56. Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come
  57. Gingerbread
  58. Gryla
  59. Heat Miser
  60. History of some Christmas traditions
  61. Hogmanay
  62. Holly
  63. Jack Frost
  64. Jolasveinar
  65. Joulupukki
  66. Julemanden
  67. Koleda
  68. La Befana
  69. Lebkuchen
  70. Little Christmas
  71. Marzipan
  72. Mince pie
  73. Mistletoe
  74. Mr. Bingle
  75. Mrs. Claus
  76. Mulled wine
  77. Nativity Fast
  78. Nativity of Jesus
  79. Nativity scene
  80. Nine Lessons and Carols
  81. North Pole, Alaska
  82. Nutcracker
  83. Olentzero
  84. Origins of Santa Claus
  85. Pandoro
  86. Panettone
  87. Panforte
  88. Pantomime
  89. Père Noël
  90. Poinsettia
  91. Regifting
  92. Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree
  93. Royal Christmas Message
  94. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
  95. Saint Nicholas
  96. Santa Claus
  97. Santa Claus Is Coming to Town
  98. Santa Claus on film
  99. Santa Claus parade
  100. Santa Claus' reindeer
  101. Santa Claus rituals
  102. Santa's Grotto
  103. Santon
  104. Secret Santa
  105. Snap-dragon
  106. Snow baby
  107. Snow Miser
  108. Star of Bethlehem
  109. Stollen
  110. The Grinch
  111. Tiny Tim
  112. Tio de Nadal
  113. Tomte
  114. Tree topper
  115. Turron
  116. Twelfth Night
  117. Twelve days of Christmas
  118. Twelve-dish Christmas Eve supper
  119. Wassail
  120. Wassailing
  121. White Christmas
  122. Winter holiday greetings
  123. Winter holiday season
  124. Xmas
  125. Yule
  126. Yule Goat
  127. Yule Lads
  128. Yule log
  129. Zwarte Piet

 

 
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CHRISTMAS TRADITIONS
This article is from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_of_Christmas_Yet_to_Come

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License 

Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come (also known as Mike Rodgers or Fatty McFaggins to some) is a character in English novelist Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol. The Ghost, being non-speaking did not identify himself by name, but, in the original book, Scrooge sometimes referred to him as spirit of Christmas future, and sometimes of Christmas yet to come.[1]

The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come is the last of the three spirits (after the visitation by Jacob Marley) that haunts the miser Ebenezer Scrooge, in order to prompt him to adopt a more caring attitude in life and avoid the horrid afterlife of Marley. Most people find it the most fearsome of the spirits — the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come appeared to Scrooge as a figure entirely muffled in a black hooded robe, except for a single gaunt hand with which it pointed, and it never spoke or made any sort of vocal noise.

When the Ghost makes its appearance, the first thing it shows Scrooge is three wealthy gentlemen making light of a recent death, remarking that it'll be a cheap funeral, and they'd only go if lunch was provided. Next, Scrooge is shown the same dead person's belongings being stolen and pawned. He also sees a shrouded corpse he implores not to unmask and a poor, debtor family rejoicing that someone to whom they owed money is dead. After pleading to the ghost to see kindness connected with death, Scrooge is shown Bob Cratchit and his family mourning the passing of Tiny Tim. Scrooge is then taken to a churchyard, where he is shown his own grave, and realizes that the dead man the others spoke ill of was him. Implied, however, is that the future does not have to be — but Scrooge must change himself if he is to change his future.

Trivia

  • The Ghost has been played by Michael Carter, C Konarski, Nicholas Kaledin, Stephen D'Ambrose, Peter Sellers, and Dan Tobin.
  • In the 1970 movie musical adaptation, Scrooge, starring Albert Finney, the spectre of the future reveals itself to be a skeletal figure in the churchyard scene, frightening Scrooge so as to topple backward into his grave and right into the very bowels of Hell, with torture and imprisonment to follow.
  • While the novel depicts the spirit as leaving Ebenezer alone in the cemetery where his grave lies, many adaptions feature Scrooge being physically lowered into the abyss after he discovers that it is his grave (and subsequently wakes up).
  • In the 1984 adaptation with George C Scott as Scrooge, the Ghost actually does make vocal noises; whenever it appears, a strange sound that sounds like a rusty gate fills the atmosphere.
  • In Mickey's Christmas Carol, an animated adaptation featuring famous Disney characters in Dickens' roles, Black Pete plays the Ghost of Christmas Future. He doesn't speak or show his face, until Ebenezer Scrooge (played by Scrooge McDuck) sees his gravestone, when Pete says 'Why yours, Ebenezer; richest man in the cemetery!' Then he starts to laugh maniacally as Scrooge is thrown into his grave, where fire bursts through the empty coffin below.
  • While this ghost undoubtedly shows Ebenezer some of his most harrowing visions yet, he is often referred to as the kindest of the three in both the original novel and most film interpretations, possibly due to his using these images but delivering the final piece of evidence which steers Ebenezer from his fate.
  • In the 1997 TV movie Ms. Scrooge, the Ghost is played by Julian Richings. He is shown to be a silent man dressed in black, as if he's attending a funeral.
  • In most film and television remakes, the Ghost is often depicted in a form similar to that of the Grim Reaper.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_of_Christmas_Yet_to_Come"