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"
Yes
;
for
to-morrow
,
Monday
,
"
she
replied
.
Passepartout
hurried
off
as
fast
as
his
legs
could
carry
him
.
It
is
time
to
relate
what
a
change
took
place
in
English
public
opinion
when
it
transpired
that
the
real
bankrobber
,
a
certain
James
Strand
,
had
been
arrested
,
on
the
17th
day
of
December
,
at
Edinburgh
.
Three
days
before
,
Phileas
Fogg
had
been
a
criminal
,
who
was
being
desperately
followed
up
by
the
police
;
now
he
was
an
honourable
gentleman
,
mathematically
pursuing
his
eccentric
journey
round
the
world
.
The
papers
resumed
their
discussion
about
the
wager
;
all
those
who
had
laid
bets
,
for
or
against
him
,
revived
their
interest
,
as
if
by
magic
;
the
"
Phileas
Fogg
bonds
"
again
became
negotiable
,
and
many
new
wagers
were
made
.
Phileas
Fogg
's
name
was
once
more
at
a
premium
on
'
Change
.
His
five
friends
of
the
Reform
Club
passed
these
three
days
in
a
state
of
feverish
suspense
.
Would
Phileas
Fogg
,
whom
they
had
forgotten
,
reappear
before
their
eyes
!
Where
was
he
at
this
moment
?
The
17th
of
December
,
the
day
of
James
Strand
's
arrest
,
was
the
seventy-sixth
since
Phileas
Fogg
's
departure
,
and
no
news
of
him
had
been
received
.
Was
he
dead
?
Had
he
abandoned
the
effort
,
or
was
he
continuing
his
journey
along
the
route
agreed
upon
?
And
would
he
appear
on
Saturday
,
the
21st
of
December
,
at
a
quarter
before
nine
in
the
evening
,
on
the
threshold
of
the
Reform
Club
saloon
?
The
anxiety
in
which
,
for
three
days
,
London
society
existed
,
can
not
be
described
.
Telegrams
were
sent
to
America
and
Asia
for
news
of
Phileas
Fogg
.
Messengers
were
dispatched
to
the
house
in
Saville
Row
morning
and
evening
.
No
news
.
The
police
were
ignorant
what
had
become
of
the
detective
,
Fix
,
who
had
so
unfortunately
followed
up
a
false
scent
.
Bets
increased
,
nevertheless
,
in
number
and
value
.
Phileas
Fogg
,
like
a
racehorse
,
was
drawing
near
his
last
turning-point
.
The
bonds
were
quoted
,
no
longer
at
a
hundred
below
par
,
but
at
twenty
,
at
ten
,
and
at
five
;
and
paralytic
old
Lord
Albemarle
bet
even
in
his
favour
.
A
great
crowd
was
collected
in
Pall
Mall
and
the
neighbouring
streets
on
Saturday
evening
;
it
seemed
like
a
multitude
of
brokers
permanently
established
around
the
Reform
Club
.
Circulation
was
impeded
,
and
everywhere
disputes
,
discussions
,
and
financial
transactions
were
going
on
.
The
police
had
great
difficulty
in
keeping
back
the
crowd
,
and
as
the
hour
when
Phileas
Fogg
was
due
approached
,
the
excitement
rose
to
its
highest
pitch
.
The
five
antagonists
of
Phileas
Fogg
had
met
in
the
great
saloon
of
the
club
.
John
Sullivan
and
Samuel
Fallentin
,
the
bankers
,
Andrew
Stuart
,
the
engineer
,
Gauthier
Ralph
,
the
director
of
the
Bank
of
England
,
and
Thomas
Flanagan
,
the
brewer
,
one
and
all
waited
anxiously
.
When
the
clock
indicated
twenty
minutes
past
eight
,
Andrew
Stuart
got
up
,
saying
,
"
Gentlemen
,
in
twenty
minutes
the
time
agreed
upon
between
Mr.
Fogg
and
ourselves
will
have
expired
.
"