This is one of Verne's most popular novels. Fokker, the hero, made a bet with his friend that he would travel around the world once in 80 days and then return to London. Although he overcame all kinds of difficulties, he arrived in London five minutes late and thought he had failed. However, he won an unexpected victory, because he circled the world from west to east, just saving a day. His works were widely popular after being adapted into plays.
Around the World in 80 Days is a very famous sci-fi and literary work, which describes the story of Filias Fogg and his servant Lu Tong traveling around the world and taking risks along the way. The novel begins with a bet, interspersed with love stories and humorous stories, which is unforgettable and instructive.
Chapter one Mr fogg and the new servant
Chapter II Betting at Poker Table
Chapter three begins to travel around the world.
Chapter four The detective fell in love with Mr. Fogg.
Chapter v consular signature on passport.
Chapter 6 Lulu talks too much
Chapter VII Encounter at Sea
Chapter VIII Trouble of Passepartout Temple
Chapter 9 Riding an elephant through the forest
Chapter 10 Bravely save Aouda's wife
Chapter 11 Shura's trick failed
Chapter XII Head-on Conflict
Chapter 13 Aouda didn't find her cousin
Chapter 14 Passepartout was arrested
Chapter 15 wishful thinking fell through again
Chapter 16 Overcoming the Storm
Chapter 17 Passepartout's Wandering Story
Chapter 18 Shura changed his mind
Chapter 19 Street distress in San Francisco
Chapter 20 Lu Yu bison
Chapter 21 The train risks crossing the bridge
Chapter 22 Duel with the Colonel
Chapter 23 Indians rob trains
Chapter 24 Sleigh galloping on the snowfield
Chapter 25 Overcoming Bad Luck
Chapter 26 Mr Fogg lost.
Chapter 27 Happy ending
Travel around the world in 80 days: run around the earth.
□ Meng Qingde
Jules verne, a Frenchman, introduced a special character to the world with his novel Around the World in 80 Days. Mr Phileas Fogg, a wealthy gentleman living in London, whose background is almost unknown all over the world, stood there like a clock from the moment he appeared. He is as serious as a clock and as accurate as a clock. No matter what happens, he never worries or gets angry. He just walked on at his own pace. He eats regularly, goes to bed regularly and even goes to the club to play cards. Move your legs at a fixed time every day, with 576 steps on your left foot and 575 steps on your right foot.
The biggest difference between Mr. Fogg and the clock is that the clock can make a sound, while Mr. Fogg can hardly speak. In a 270-page book, Mr. Fogg's speech only accounts for five or six pages at most. However, if he doesn't speak, it means that he will make a decision on one thing, which means that he will do it. He said it would take 80 days to travel around the world, and he dared to gamble with his life. He said he would spend 80 days traveling around the world. He got up and left with the servant. At the last moment of the 80th day, he ignored the buzzing sound outside the club gate.
Mr fogg dares to gamble with his life, because he knows that the earth is round in 1872, because he dares to take all his possessions except gambling, 20,000 pounds, to pay for road trip who bridged the mountain, because he regards the traffic conditions such as boats and cars along the way as his palm print. Finally, and most importantly, there was a gentleman who firmly believed that one thing could be done for the public to see.
Mr Fogg finally succeeded, which can't be blamed on jules verne's insistence on arranging a happy ending for his characters. This only shows that he spent 80 days traveling around the world even under the traffic conditions at that time. Everything in the world, no matter how vigorous, is nothing in the end. The most thrilling thing is the process that makes the world stunned. This is called creating a brilliant process that amazes God. Just as the Tang Priest and his disciples had to go through 81 difficulties to learn from the West, Mr. Fogg and his servants traveled all over Europe, Africa, Asia and America, using a series of available means of transportation along the way, such as ships, trains, carriages, yachts, merchant ships, elephants and sledges. On the way, Indian cannibals hunted down, Hong Kong's marijuana and spirits were psychedelic, the waves set off by the Pacific hurricane, and the bullets whizzed by Native Americans. However, in the face of all this, Mr. Fogg has always been so calm, as calm as watching the world play and as calm as watching other people's business.
Aside from many things that hinder Mr. Fogg in the book, the most terrible thing should actually be on the banks of the Suez Canal in Egypt. If God's eyes were a little biased-no, if the legal construction in Britain was a little less serious, if the police officers Mr. Fogg met were a little indifferent to the law, and if the police officers Mr. Fogg met were not British but people from another country, then Mr. Fogg should have called as early as when he had just crossed Europe. However, although Mr. Fix, a British police detective, admitted that Mr. Fogg was a suspect in the recent robbery of the British National Bank, he still respected British law. He has to wait for London to issue an arrest warrant for him. He followed Mr. Fogg all the way from Africa, across Asia, across America and back to Europe, and finally became a witness of Mr. Fogg's global travel. Finally, it was not until he returned to Europe and reached the gate of London, where English law could be legally enforced, that Mr. Fix finally showed Mr. Fogg an arrest warrant and detained Mr. Fogg in a place only one step away from success. However, as the book says, he acted according to the law, which is entirely his duty, although his reason and emotion have told him that his judgment is likely to be wrong.
Mr fogg is as rigid as wood, as rigid as mathematics and as serious as a clock. In the process of traveling around the world, he ignored windows and portholes, and he didn't even look at the scenery. As the book says, "He is not traveling, he just wants to walk around the earth." All he wants is to finish his plan meticulously, all he wants is efficiency, and all he wants is that this link can be closely linked with the next one. Looking through Mr. Fogg's global diary, through many appearances, what Mr. Fogg really values is not winning or losing, or even the recognition of the world. What he pursues is to prove the feasibility of traveling around the world in 80 days. What he wants is real realization, and all he wants is to know for himself.
It crosses the Mediterranean Sea, the Red Sea, the Indian Ocean, the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean to India, Singapore, China, Japan and the United States.
1. Fogg bet120,000 pounds with the members of the improvement club that they could circle the earth in 80 days. Set out from London with a servant who knows everything.
Travel route:
1 Take the train from London to Suez Canal;
Take a boat from Suez Canal to India;
Cross India by train
From Indian to China and Hongkong.
Now take a boat from Hong Kong to Japan and America.
After crossing the United States by train
Return to London from America
Two. Days of use:
From London to Suez via Seni Peak and Brindisi, by train and cruise ship-7 days;
From Suez to Mumbai, cruise-13 days; From Mumbai to Calcutta, by train-3 days;
From Kolkata to Hong Kong, take a cruise-13 days; From Hong Kong to Yokohama, by cruise-6 days;
From Yokohama to San Francisco, by cruise-22 days; From San Francisco to new york, by train-7 days;
From new york to London, cruise and train-9 days; ***80 days in total. When Fogg returned to London, he thought he was five minutes late for the first time. He thought he failed, but he won unexpectedly. It turns out that he traveled around the world from west to east, and he saved a day by using the time difference! Along the way, Fokker's wit, courage and perseverance all showed a complete gentleman's demeanor, and finally he won the beauty-he rescued a martyred maharaja (Mrs. Aiuda) in India.