Montag stood there, emotionless and stiff as Mildred ran out of the house, carrying two suitcases. She barely made eye contact as she nervously approached the car. She frantically opened the passagener side door of the Beetle and threw the luggage in. Montag heard something hit the ground as she slammed the door and sped off, not saying a single word to anyone. He walked over to reveal that it was a book that had fallen from Mildred’s belongings. The book was burnt just enough that it was illegible. He quickly scanned through the pages as a small piece of paper falls out. It reads; “To: Montag, my love” on the front of it. Montag flips the paper over as he reads aloud, “Montag, I’m sorry to leave you like this but it’s for the better. …show more content…
I must leave this town before you kill all of us, goodbye. Love Mildred” Beatty walks over and rips the book out of his grasp and replaces it with a flame thrower. Montag, bewildered from the note, asked, “Why are you handing this to me?” Beatty replied with, “I want you to do this job all by your lonesome, Montag. Not with kerosene and a match, but piecework, with a flame thrower. Your house, your clean-up.” Montag was beyond livid that Mildred put in the alarm on their own house but had the courage to leave a note saying something she would never say in person. “What if she actually liked reading books with me?” “What nonsense are you speaking of? No one likes reading books. Now quit your blabbering and get to work!” Beatty replied. Beatty lead the way up and into …show more content…
He thought about running while Beatty’s back was turned, but the likeliness that the Mechanical Hound would catch him, was very high. Beatty gestured to Montag to begin as he crossed back out of the front doorway. Montag took one last look around his house and became very vengeful knowing he can destroy all of his past and Mildred’s dumb belongings. He catches a slight movement out of his peripheral vision, he looks out the window to see Clarisse standing, peering through the window. She gestured to wait. Montage walks over and opens the window. “Be close to the door and have your flame thrower ready for Beatty.” Clarisse stated as she smiled and walked sneakily away. Montag starts walking towards the door where Beatty still stood. “What are you doing?” Beatty questioned. Beatty turned around confused as he felt someone tap him on his shoulder. It was Clarisse. She pushed him forcefully backwards into the house knowing that Montag knew what to do. Montag jumped through the doorway as he threw colorful raving flames directly at Beatty. He screamed in agonizing pain but within a few seconds, it quickly quieted. Montag released the trigger as the flames slowly died down.
Montag got his old books because of the burning of the women. Montag needed a teacher and remembered he once met Professor Faber at the park. He decided to go to him and talk in person because Faber didn’t want to talk on the phone. The reason Montag wanted to talk to him was because he wanted to make copies of the Bible since he had the last
Mildred sounded the book alarm in her home, avenging Montag for not loving her and for putting her in danger (page 108). While Montag was hiding his secret library, he showed it to his wife, Mildred. Since libraries and books are illegal, Mildred felt unsafe. One day while Montag was at work, Mildred rang the alarm in their house, which called the firemen. Montag and the firemen came rushing to the house, not knowing it was Montag’s. Montag ended up burning his own house down, piece by piece, with a flamethrower.
Mildred has found a book under Montag's pillow and is trying to tell officer Beatty to get Montag in trouble. This quote states how mildred is like a robot “ Her mouth moved and she way saying something but the sound covered it.” This quote shows how society wants no books around. She was trying to tell officer Beatty that montag has a book. This society changed people to try and get people with different mindsets in trouble. It’s obvious that the government controls what the citizens think. The society they live i wants people to see books as threats meaning bad for someone to own them. This explains why mildred acts so robotic she is basically controlled by the government.
Beatty’s speech explains why Mildred acts the way she does, which had started to become a mystery for Montag, She acts in ways that are robotic, or self-centered, or unfeeling. Beatty’s speech explains the reason
She is addicted to sleeping pills, absorbed in the shallow dramas played on her "parlor walls" (flat-panel televisions), and indifferent to the oppressive society around her. She is described in the book as "thin as a praying mantis from dieting, and her flesh like white bacon." Despite her husband's attempts to break her from the spell society has on her, Mildred continues to be shallow and indifferent. After Montag scares her friends away by reading Dover Beach and unable to live with someone who has been hoarding books, Mildred betrays Montag by reporting him to the firemen and abandoning him.
Montag is realizing wrong his world really is. He wants to change it too. He says “ Im going to do something, I dont know what yet but im going t do something big.” He doesnt know what to do yet because at this point he hasnt figured out the “missing peice”. Montag says “ I dont know. we have everything we need to be happy, but we arent happy. Something is missing.” then he starts to understand that books are the key to knowladge and knowledge is what they need. he says “There must be something in books that we cant imagine, to make a woman stay in a burning house; there must be something there, you dont stay for nothing.” And this is the turning point of the book because now montag is ready to take
The third reason why Mildred is a bad wife if because she doesn’t have a heart. Everyone feels the lost if someone you know died. Montag just realized that he’s been killing people for the wrong reason. People whose only offense is reading books, and killing an innocent soul is no different than being a murderer. She doesn’t care that people died. She doesn’t give a crap that her husband is a murderer. “She means nothing to me!” are the exact words that she used because she only cares about herself.
Mildred, Montag's wife always talks about her “family” on the T.Vs on the parlor walls. Mildred cannot accept any reality that contradicts her world on the three parlor walls. Mildred is so unhappy with reality that she uses seashell earbuds to block out the world around her. She puts the earbuds in to replace reality with her fantasy “family”. Whenever Montag tries to talk to Mildred when she has her seashell earbuds in it takes him awhile to get her attention. “Late in night he looked over at Mildred. She was awake. There was a tiny dance of melody in the air, her seashell was tamped in her ear again, and she was listening to far people in far places, her eyes wide and staring at the fathoms of blackness above her in the ceiling. (Bradbury
In addition to unawareness, abnormal relationships develop in the society because without books one couple may struggle in communication. After Beatty’s visit Mildred concluded Montag’s question “My ‘family’ is people. They tell me things: I laugh, they laugh! And the colors!”(75). Mildred feels her family is just people as if she thought people were just objects roaming around the earth.
Montag defines, “her face was like a snow-covered island upon which rain might fall, but it felt no rain; over which clouds might pass their moving shadows, but she felt no shadow” (13). Montag is describing how Mildred appears to him every day. This quotation proves that without books and knowledge (guidance) people in the society are unhappy, but they believe technology such as “parlor families” have the ability to keep them happy. Mildred symbolizes her society. This quotation supports depression in the society because the story clearly shows that the people are not pleased. Evidence is the fact that Mildred tried to commit suicide. If she were happy with her life and their society she would not have thought about committing suicide. “You took all the pills in your bottle last night” (19). Books not being a part of the society created a society in which everything is bad, a frightening place in the world. Mildred’s society is a dystopian society where everyone who does not have knowledge is suffering depression, they are devastating. Another example that proves that citizens in the society are depressed is when Montag feels that Captain Beatty wanted to die because he did not even try to move and purposely let Montag kill him. Evidence for the text is “he lay where he had fallen and sobbed, his legs folded, his face pressed blindly to
...s Montag doing? Is he trying to get himself killed? I mean, seriously, his wife might not get him in trouble, but these people who are following the “law” will probably get him in trouble. I can infer that Beatty will find out and come to Montag’s house, burning his books in the process. Montag will be in some serious punishment. Even Mildred was trying to protect him, by saying: “Ladies, once a year, every fireman’s allowed to bring one book home, from the old days, to show his family how silly it was…” However, I think that Mildred is doing this for her own benefit because she might not want her friends to leave, or if she loses Montag, then she has nothing. So, this passage may not be only foreshadowing that Montag will be in big trouble later, but also some facts about Mildred’s personality.
She does not express her views of the world since she spends her days watching and “communicating” with the parlor walls. Because of this, she is very forgetful of personal events and careless of others. Bradbury 40, Montag thinks back to when he and Mildred first met. “The first time we met, where was it and when?” “Why it was at-” She stopped. “I don't know,” she said. Also in Bradbury 49, Mildred states, “..let me alone. I didn't do anything,” as Montag shares his book conflict. This shows how Mildred lacks in thinking and considering the feelings of others. Therefore, she is the opposing side of the theme of the
Of all characters, Bradbury uses Mildred Montag to effectively portray the idea that the majority of society has taken happiness as a refuge in nothing but passive, addictive entertainment. She immediately reveals her character early in the book, by saying, “My family is people. They tell me things: I laugh. They laugh! And the colors!” (73). Mildred is describing her parlors, or gigantic wall televisions, in this quote. Visual technological entertainment is so important in her life that she refers them to as “family,” implying the television characters as her loved ones. By immersing herself in an imaginary world, Mildred finds herself able to relate to fake characters and plots, giving her a phony sense of security. This is necessary for her to achieve her shallow happiness, or senseless plain fun, as she lifelessly watches other people in her walls with a senseless mind. Her family in real life only consists of Guy Montag, her husband, whom she has no fond feelings about. Montag is so frustrated with Mildred because of her inability to express feelings for ...
Through the use of contrasting characters; Mildred and Montag the author reveals the important theme of ignorance vs knowledge. By showing the
(55) Beatty adds a depth to his conversation with Montag while Mildred says, “I always like to drive fast when I feel that way. [..] You hit rabbits, sometimes you hit dogs.” (61) Mildred is lacking that emotion that would be there whenever they are trying to comfort