what did the author do while travelling alone in the compartment ?
Answers
The question given above belongs to the story " A Fellow Traveller" which is written by A. G. Gardiner.
- The story opens with the narrator riding a halting train from London to a Midland town.
- The narrator and one other person remained in the damage when the train left the outer ring of London and was ready to empty.
- The narrator mistakenly believed he was the only traveler in the wreckage, but he didn't observe any.
- He was free to speak loudly, stand on his head, earn fictitious tights, sing, dance, practice his golf swing, and play marbles on the floor without restriction. Break DORA rules and no one would ever be the wiser.
- The author set down his paper when alone in the compartment, stretched his arms and legs, stood up and peered out the window, lighted a cigar, sat down, and started reading the paper once more.
- A mosquito then startled him. It sat on his nose and bit his neck after that. He was brushed off by the narrator, but the bug bothered him. Back at his paper, he went.
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ANSWER :
The author took a break from reading while alone in the compartment, stretched his arms and legs, stood up, and glanced out the window.
He then lit a cigar, sat back down, and resumed reading the paper.
EXPLANATION :
AG Gardiner is the author of the lesson "AFellow-Traveler."
The author was on a train from Landon to a town in the Midlands.
In the cabin, he was by himself.
Being alone in a compartment gives the passenger the pleasant feeling of freedom to do as he pleases, according to A.G. Gardiner.
The themes of unpredictability, freedom, control, generosity, appearance, equality, and modesty are explored in A Fellow Traveller by A.G. Gardiner.
The reader recognises from the outset of the essay that Gardiner might be examining the issue of uncertainty because it is taken from his Leaves in the Wind collection.
The author attempted to read a blue book in the train car as he entered it, but he was unable to do so since the necessary.
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