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Provide two of dialogue from characters in "A Christmas Carol" that support the climax I identified. 99 POINTS!!!

Climax:
The climax of "A Christmas Carol" is when Scrooge is shown his own grave by the mysterious, silent Phantom of the Future, and is absolutely terrified. He is terrified not only by the vision of his own death but also the build-up to this vision in which no-one showed any grief at all over his death. He is utterly appalled at this idea of himself dying alone, mourned by nobody. It is the manner of his death that scares him rather than the thought of death itself. This is what spurs him on to completely change his ways and be a kind, caring person for the rest of his life, and we're told that he does so very successfully. This is the very heart of the novel - the great transformation that is wrought in Scrooge by the visit of the Three Spirits. It is, essentially, a moral tale.

Respuesta :

As well as you write, you don't need anyone to point out dialog for you. I think you want to say that it is a morality tale. And that's the only thing I found to change. You have certainly defended your point well enough: your point is well taken. After he is shown his own death, there is no where for him to go. He can choose to ignore the message of the spirits, or he can take Morley's warning. His choice. 

Look in your book to see which part shows this exactly. According to what you have written, it would be where he begs the spirit to say that it is not so. He asks if these are the things that must be, or can they be altered. He is truly terrified at that point, and that's what you need to quote. 

What you have written here in the questions perfectly fits the questions needs one thing you should for is when he begs the spirit