<h2><SPAN name="chap37"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVII.<br/> IN WHICH IT IS SHOWN THAT PHILEAS FOGG GAINED NOTHING BY HIS TOUR AROUND THE WORLD, UNLESS IT WERE HAPPINESS</h2>
<p>Yes; Phileas Fogg in person.</p>
<p>The reader will remember that at five minutes past eight in the
evening—about five and twenty hours after the arrival of the travellers
in London—Passepartout had been sent by his master to engage the services
of the Reverend Samuel Wilson in a certain marriage ceremony, which was to take
place the next day.</p>
<p>Passepartout went on his errand enchanted. He soon reached the
clergyman’s house, but found him not at home. Passepartout waited a good
twenty minutes, and when he left the reverend gentleman, it was thirty-five
minutes past eight. But in what a state he was! With his hair in disorder, and
without his hat, he ran along the street as never man was seen to run before,
overturning passers-by, rushing over the sidewalk like a waterspout.</p>
<p>In three minutes he was in Saville Row again, and staggered back into Mr.
Fogg’s room.</p>
<p>He could not speak.</p>
<p>“What is the matter?” asked Mr. Fogg.</p>
<p>“My master!” gasped
Passepartout—“marriage—impossible—”</p>
<p>“Impossible?”</p>
<p>“Impossible—for to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Why so?”</p>
<p>“Because to-morrow—is Sunday!”</p>
<p>“Monday,” replied Mr. Fogg.</p>
<p>“No—to-day is Saturday.”</p>
<p>“Saturday? Impossible!”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes, yes, yes!” cried Passepartout. “You have made a
mistake of one day! We arrived twenty-four hours ahead of time; but there are
only ten minutes left!”</p>
<p>Passepartout had seized his master by the collar, and was dragging him along
with irresistible force.</p>
<p>Phileas Fogg, thus kidnapped, without having time to think, left his house,
jumped into a cab, promised a hundred pounds to the cabman, and, having run
over two dogs and overturned five carriages, reached the Reform Club.</p>
<p>The clock indicated a quarter before nine when he appeared in the great saloon.</p>
<p>Phileas Fogg had accomplished the journey round the world in eighty days!</p>
<p>Phileas Fogg had won his wager of twenty thousand pounds!</p>
<p>How was it that a man so exact and fastidious could have made this error of a
day? How came he to think that he had arrived in London on Saturday, the
twenty-first day of December, when it was really Friday, the twentieth, the
seventy-ninth day only from his departure?</p>
<p>The cause of the error is very simple.</p>
<p>Phileas Fogg had, without suspecting it, gained one day on his journey, and
this merely because he had travelled constantly <i>eastward;</i> he would, on
the contrary, have lost a day had he gone in the opposite direction, that is,
<i>westward</i>.</p>
<p>In journeying eastward he had gone towards the sun, and the days therefore
diminished for him as many times four minutes as he crossed degrees in this
direction. There are three hundred and sixty degrees on the circumference of
the earth; and these three hundred and sixty degrees, multiplied by four
minutes, gives precisely twenty-four hours—that is, the day unconsciously
gained. In other words, while Phileas Fogg, going eastward, saw the sun pass
the meridian <i>eighty</i> times, his friends in London only saw it pass the
meridian <i>seventy-nine</i> times. This is why they awaited him at the Reform
Club on Saturday, and not Sunday, as Mr. Fogg thought.</p>
<p>And Passepartout’s famous family watch, which had always kept London
time, would have betrayed this fact, if it had marked the days as well as the
hours and the minutes!</p>
<p>Phileas Fogg, then, had won the twenty thousand pounds; but, as he had spent
nearly nineteen thousand on the way, the pecuniary gain was small. His object
was, however, to be victorious, and not to win money. He divided the one
thousand pounds that remained between Passepartout and the unfortunate Fix,
against whom he cherished no grudge. He deducted, however, from
Passepartout’s share the cost of the gas which had burned in his room for
nineteen hundred and twenty hours, for the sake of regularity.</p>
<p>That evening, Mr. Fogg, as tranquil and phlegmatic as ever, said to Aouda:
“Is our marriage still agreeable to you?”</p>
<p>“Mr. Fogg,” replied she, “it is for me to ask that question.
You were ruined, but now you are rich again.”</p>
<p>“Pardon me, madam; my fortune belongs to you. If you had not suggested
our marriage, my servant would not have gone to the Reverend Samuel
Wilson’s, I should not have been apprised of my error, and—”</p>
<p>“Dear Mr. Fogg!” said the young woman.</p>
<p>“Dear Aouda!” replied Phileas Fogg.</p>
<p>It need not be said that the marriage took place forty-eight hours after, and
that Passepartout, glowing and dazzling, gave the bride away. Had he not saved
her, and was he not entitled to this honour?</p>
<p>The next day, as soon as it was light, Passepartout rapped vigorously at his
master’s door. Mr. Fogg opened it, and asked, “What’s the
matter, Passepartout?”</p>
<p>“What is it, sir? Why, I’ve just this instant found
out—”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“That we might have made the tour of the world in only seventy-eight
days.”</p>
<p>“No doubt,” returned Mr. Fogg, “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—”</p>
<p>Mr. Fogg quietly shut the door.</p>
<p>Phileas Fogg had won his wager, and had made his journey around the world in
eighty days. To do this he had employed every means of
conveyance—steamers, railways, carriages, yachts, trading-vessels,
sledges, elephants. The eccentric gentleman had throughout displayed all his
marvellous qualities of coolness and exactitude. But what then? What had he
really gained by all this trouble? What had he brought back from this long and
weary journey?</p>
<p>Nothing, say you? Perhaps so; nothing but a charming woman, who, strange as it
may appear, made him the happiest of men!</p>
<p>Truly, would you not for less than that make the tour around the world?</p>
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