The fear of the truth and admitting the truth is boldly seen in Fahrenheit 451, and then when it is revealed to the person, it results in brokenness and sorrow. Beatty is a prime example of avoiding the truth. Throughout the book, he hints at knowing the truth, but covers it up by burning books and peoples' opinions, and then building technology full of junk. Because of this, Beatty is left broken and sad, and eventually, he pays for it. When Montag was burning his house along with the books, he pointed the flame thrower at Beatty and stood there. He turned it on and flames ate Beatty up, then he thought to himself afterwards that "Beatty wanted to die. In the middle of crying Montag knew it for the truth. Beatty wanted to die. He had just stood there, not really trying to save himself, just stood there, joking, needling, thought Montag, and the thought was enough to stifle his sobbing and let him pause for air" (116). …show more content…
The truth about life catches fire and spreads to him quickly, but he throws water at it, putting it out. Although, the truth always comes back, and the charcoal ignites back up, and burns Beatty in the
between our world and the novel’s world, like why people break the law, how robots change the world, and how books are important in our world and in the world of fahrenheit 451.
While Montag is on the run in the streets, he hears through a Seashell a command for everyone to look for him, and his mind pictures a very realistic image: “He imagined thousands on thousands of faces peering into yards, into alleys, and into the sky, faces hid by curtains, pale, night-frightened faces, like gray animals peering from electric caves, faces with gray colorless eyes, gray tongues and gray thoughts looking out through the numb flesh of his face” (132). He pictures “thousands on thousands” of people conforming to the will of an upper government, no questions asked. They all will do exactly as told, but something about the image seems especially unsettling. The word “gray” was repeated four times and connected to every phrase describing them. This color is often associated with blandness and lack of unique color, and
“’Strange. I heard once that a long time ago houses used to burn by accident and they needed firemen to stop the flames’” (Bradbury 6). In the dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, Guy Montag is a fireman, someone that burns books for the government to keep a firm control on what knowledge society has. However, through a series of events populated by an attempted suicide, a young girl, and an old man, Montag is shown a life where books are treasured instead of feared and hated. Armed with a vision of what the world has been, and could be like again, Montag ultimately meets up in the aftermath of a war with others that share his vision, and they begin their mission to make fire something other than a source of fear: a healing power.
“Thou shalt not be a victim, thou shalt not be a perpetrator, but, above all, thou shalt not be a bystander.” -Yehuda Bauer. In the book Fahrenheit 451, written by Ray bradbury, Montag did not stand by and observe the corruption of the government, but instead took matters into his own hands and rebelled for what he believed in. A person is able to rebel when they cannot think their own way, when they are forced to do something, and the uneasiness of being unsafe.
“You're not like the others. I've seen a few; I know. When I talk, you look at me. When I said something about the moon, you looked at the moon, last night. The others would never do that. The others would walk off and leave me talking. Or threaten me. No one has time any more for anyone else. You're one of the few who put up with me. That's why I think it's so strange you're a fireman, it just doesn't seem right for you, somehow. (Page 21)
“Old Montag wanted to fly near the sun and now that his wings are burnt off he wonders why” said Beatty to Montag when the firemen are dispatched to Montag’s house. This quote comes from Greek Mythology, the Death of Icarus. Icarus made himself wax wings to fly away from his imprisonment, he flew to close to the sun and his wings melted and he drowned. This relates to Montag because he tried to live a double life and ended up “burnt” in the end.
Beatty is essentially an anti-Clarisse. Beatty represents the unseen force that drags people into conformity, giving Montag a sugarcoated explanation of how books came to be banned. Throughout most of the book, Beatty is trying to undo the effect of Clarisse. However, all this does is lead Montag to antagonize Beatty, so Beatty confronts Montag about the books. After going home, Montag’s wife has friends come over and Montag gets frustrated and forces the women to read with him. The next day, Mildred’s (Montag’s wife) friends report Montag’s books to the firemen, which Beatty “let ride.”Later, Mildred reports it and Beatty decides to take action, realizing that re-corrupting Montag is futile. Beatty forces Montag to burn his own house down. After this, Montag burns Beatty alive with the flamethrower he used to burn the house, knocking the other two firemen unconscious
Guy Montag is a fireman who burns books and follows all of the rules. He likes his job “It was a pleasure to burn” (pg 3). Montag enjoys his job so deeply that he “grinned the fierce grin of all men singed and driven back by flame” (pg 4). He follows the ideas of society, does not question the government, and tries not to be the odd one out. When he meets his new neighbor, Clarisse, she gets him to think about himself as a fireman and says “So many people are. Afraid of firemen” (pg 6), which tells us that firemen have mediocre popularity among the public.
In the novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, there is a fireman named Guy Montag who has been burning books for ten years. However, once he meets a 17-year old girl named Clarisse and a professor who tells him about the value of books, he realizes that he would rather give up his job than burn books. Unfortunately, there are many individuals in Montag’s society who have differing mentalities about books. The individuals in Montag’s society are distracted by outside forces that prevent them from forming and maintaining a stable community.
Finding the hostility of reading books is odd and peculiar but what if the world is full of people that feel inferior to those that know more than them or who have read a wider variation of books, and in that they simply decide that knowledge is not a power we need, nor literature. In a futuristic world where few people see meaning and potential one can find people like Clarisse McClellan to bring the light into people like Guy Montag's world and to see through the modern simulation of life without books filled with fast cars, loud music, and advertisements for distraction from a life eerie and sinister that lead deeper in discussion of religion and discrimination. The people of the city are ignorant to the knowledge, messages, and life lessons that the books they are burning hold. Those that read books are punished by having their house with all possessions burned at their feet and if not that then they are on the run with other renegades that crave the information stored in books.
“Are you happy?” That was the question that changed Montag’s life forever. The day Clarisse asked him this was a day that he would never forget. He will never forget it because this one, little question made him rethink his whole life. Everything he had ever thought to be true was wrong. It was the beginning of his new life, and he didn’t even know it yet. It’s amazing to think that this one question, the one that others would have just overlooked, this simple question could have changed someone’s life completely. But it did.
“If you play with fire, you’re gonna get burned.”, this famous quote was wrote by the unknown, however the quote resembles a story written by Ray Bradbury, the story is Fahrenheit 451. “The novel of firemen who are paid to set books ablaze.” , this statement can be found on the front cover of the story Fahrenheit 451. Firefighters should never be the ones to start a fire they should extinguish it, because it destroys homes and families.
Imagine being restricted to do things you like. Imagine not being able to read a book or facing death if caught reading one. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury explores the idea of books being illegal and how they affect society. The theme in Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury is that ignorance and knowledge as individual concepts will always go up against each other but knowledge will always win. In the novel knowledge and ignorance are presented through different people. These people influence Guy Montag into the person he becomes in the end. The first person introduced is Clarisse McClellan. She is Guy’s new neighbour. Although she is young she is the first knowledgeable person in this society to change Guy’s perception of life. The second person who influences Guy is his wife, Mildred.
Montag from Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, in my opinion, is ignorant. I think this because in the book, Montag is always following the crowd. In part three, Granger says, “I’ve been running ever since. Do you want to join us, Montag?” Montag immediately replies with, “Yes.” He gives no thought as to where he would be going, what he would be doing, or anything more. He hadn’t even known these people before stumbling upon them, yet he is so quick to trust and follow them like a lemming. With the thought of a lemming in mind, Montag also just follows the crowd without a second thought. In part two, Faber is talking to Montag and says, “The public itself stopped reading of its own accord. You firemen provide a circus now and then at which buildings
In an indifferent society that only tracks, copies, and pretends, diversity is unthought of. However, Guy Montag, the protagonist in Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, is not like the rest of his society. Ray Bradbury’s novel Fahrenheit 451 is set in a futuristic time where independent thinking is outlawed. Bradbury’s novel represents a time and place in which individuals who want to learn and grow are thought of as uncivilized. These “uncivilized” people are being thrown into insane asylums because of their desire towards knowledge. Policemen are called to the scene if someone is in possession of a book. Firemen are then instructed to scorch all the books and sometimes even the entire house if it seems it is a threat to society. Guy Montag, the