When Fix arrested Phileas Fogg, Passepartout thought that he was a cause of his
master’s misfortune. Give reason.
Answers
Answered by
43
Answer:
Passepartout thinks Phileas Fogg will give up the journey when they reach Bombay. Fix finds Passepartout several times during the voyage and pumps him for more information about Fogg.
Explanation:
Mark me as branliest and give thanks
Answered by
6
Passepartout had disguised Fix's actual thought processes from his lord which brought about the capture of Fogg at Liverpool.
- Assuming that he had cautioned his lord about Fix's aims, Fogg would have demonstrated his guiltlessness.
- His evidence of innocence would have let Fogg free and Fix would not have kept a nearby watch on him which lead to his capture and demonstrated as an obstruction in his excursion.
Around the World in Eighty Days written by Jules Gabriel Verne tells us about:
- Phileas Fogg – The hero and chief protagonist in the book. He is tested by an individual card shark to circumvent the world in eighty days and he responds to the call. His soundness, smoothness, liberality, and poise appeal to the reader.
- Passepartout – He is a representative of Phileas Fogg. He is fair just as a comic French man. He is faithful to his lord but then gets into circumstances that make his lord's arrangements hard to go all over the planet. Passepartout draws in the reader with his faithfulness, warmth, and his funny bone.
- Detective Fix – He is the analyst. He arrives at some unacceptable resolution that Fogg is the burglar and is simply professing to circumvent the world when his genuine design is to swindle the law. He attempts to catch Fogg.
Similar questions