why did writer say that it was scarcely a setting for romantic adventure English class second book ch 3
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Fowler was a young and romantic writer. He envisioned mysterious figures in the dark, crack of pistols and drugs in the wine. He expected messages to be delivered in the hands of the spy Ausable by dark eyed beauties. But instead, he spent a boring evening with a fat, sloppy man who gets only a prosaic telephone call in the musty corridor of a gloomy French hotel. Hence he felt that it was scarcely a setting for a romantic adventure.
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a very good and helpful answer
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