Thursday, August 25, 2011

fahrenheit 451 Post 8

At his house, Montag watches Clarisse's old house and Beatty notices, after which he chastises him. Mildred comes out of the house and is taken away in a taxi. Beatty forces Montag to burn his house on his own. After he is done, Beatty places him under arrest. Montag burns Beatty to a crisp with his flamethrower and knocks the other firemen out. The Hound is able to inject Montag with anisthetic before he is able to destroy it. Montag runs into the backyard and recovers four books that Mildred missed. He stashes them at a coworker's house after discovering that there is a police report out for him. Montag travels to Faber's house, where he is instructed to leave town following the railroad tracks and meet Faber in St. Louis in the future at an old printer's house. Montag instructs Faber to remove his scent from his house so the new Hound can't track him there, and he departs.

Mildred completely betrayed Montag, and he knows that she will soon forget him. Fire has two contradictary meanings. It stands for Montag's liberation, and he feels remorse later for his actions. Bradbury uses figurative language heavily in this section. He uses many sentence structures, varying from fractures to a long, lengthy sentence.

http://www.123rf.com/photo_3611730_businessman-being-handcuffed-and-placed-under-arrest.html

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