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Essay / Farenheit 451 - 2908 by Ray Bradbury illegally owned books and the homes they house. Guy originally enjoys his job, noting that it even brings him extreme pleasure, but as the story progresses, Guy Montag begins to question why he does what he does and begins to become rebellious. As he meets individuals along the way, Montag learns that there is more to life and society than what the repressive government has taught them. At the beginning of the story, Guy begins talking to his neighbor Clarisse McClellan, a seventeen-year-old girl who has a completely opposite feeling. view of life than that of Montag's wife, Mildred. Being with Clarisse causes Guy to re-examine his life, making him believe that he is no longer happy with his life and that he no longer loves his wife Mildred. While all this is happening, Mildred has no idea because she is so immersed in interactive televisions, an unhealthy addiction to tranquilizers, and her shell radio. Montag sits down and begins to question the morals of the world. Why are books seen as dangerous? Why are those who worship them considered dangerous? Motivated and looking for answers, Guy steals a book from a house where it is sent to burn. When she asks the collection's former owner to leave the house, she refuses. This makes Guy even more curious, leading him to wonder if his dedication shows that happiness can truly be found in books. Forced and pressured by his peers, he must eliminate the house and the old lady who is there. Returning home, Montag learns that he has lived his entire life a lie. Instead of serving the public like him... middle of paper... anyway, without any help from him. So if He burned things with the firefighters and the sun burned the weather, that means everything burned! Page 365 of 431. iPhone eBook (66 pages left) Style “There was only one girl walking with him now, her face shining like snow in the moonlight…” Page 13 of 431. Book iPhone electronics (168 pages left) “With the brass nozzles in his fists, with that great python spewing his venomous kerosene onto the world, the blood was pounding in his head and his hands were those of an astonishing conductor playing all the symphonies of flame and fire to bring down the shreds and charred ruins of history." – Page 4 of 431 iPhone eBook (177 pages remaining) "As he stood there, the sky above the house screamed There was a huge ripping sound, as if two giant hands had ripped tens of thousands of miles of black lemon to the bottom.)
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