Step 1: Identify the central idea of the passage
The stranger is described as fundamentally "not an owner of soil." This metaphor of soil applies both in the physical sense (ownership of land or fixed place) and in the psychological/social sense (fixed, organic ties in a community). The stranger is defined by mobility and lack of rooted connection.
Step 2: Examine each option
(A) Incorrect. Although the stranger may develop charm and significance, the passage clearly says this does not make him an "owner of soil." Personal charm does not remove the condition of strangeness.
(B) Correct. The stranger, by definition, "is not an owner of soil" in either sense — physical or psychological. This matches the core statement of the passage.
(C) Incorrect. Establishing ties of kinship, locality, or occupation would contradict the very definition of the stranger, who is never "organically connected" with such ties.
(D) Correct. The passage allows a subtle interpretation: physically, one could own soil (in the sense of land), but psychologically/socially, the stranger remains a stranger, not organically tied. Hence, this option also aligns with the text.
Step 3: Final Answer
Both (B) and (D) are consistent with the description in the passage.
\[
\boxed{\text{Correct Assumptions: (B) and (D)}}
\]
| a | Phileas Fogg and Jean Passepartout | i | William Shakespeare |
| b | Don Quixote and Sancho Panza | ii | Jules Verne |
| c | Candide and Pangloss | iii | Miguel de Cervantes |
| d | Dogberry and Verges | iv | Voltaire |
| a | Phileas Fogg and Jean Passepartout | i | William Shakespeare |
| b | Don Quixote and Sancho Panza | ii | Jules Verne |
| c | Candide and Pangloss | iii | Miguel de Cervantes |
| d | Dogberry and Verges | iv | Voltaire |