Did I not mention the wonderful news? Well, I certainly shall. All is well! Fogg did win the wager after all. This is how.
Passepartout went to the Reverend Samuel Wilson, of Marylebone parish, to tell him about the wedding 'for tomorrow'. Here the Reverend said this was not possible, as 'tomorrow' is Sunday, not Monday! Therefore, as Passepartout told us, after running through the streets and overturning many people, that we had been twenty-four hours ahead of time, making the tour of the world in only 79 days, and the wager could still be won, with only ten minutes to spare!
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| St Paul's Cathedral |
He has gained nothing financially, as he spent nearly nineteen thousand pounds on the journey, and divided that extra thousand between Passepartout (taking out of it the bill for the gas, which had been burning seventy-nine days) and Fix, at whom he held no grudge.
Despite having no more money from his journey, he has gained something: happiness. When Passepartout told him that he found out one could make the journey in seventy-eight days, he calmly said, "No doubt. By not crossing India. But if I had not crossed India, I should not have saved Aouda; she would not have been my wife, and—" He shut the door.
Passepartout gave Aouda away two days later; after all, he had saved her!
And this is where it ends. My small luggage I had taken with me on the journey is packed, and I leave in a few minutes for home. I have become fast friends with Aouda, and will visit her often. Good bye, book! You were with me through thick and thin-What is this? A letter? For me? Passepartout hands it to me.
Someone is asking my assistants in a journey around Europe in a hot air balloon...Imagine that!
I may be finished with this book, but out with the old, in comes the new...!





