SYMBOLS & DETAILS
MONTAG’S REALIZATIONS
BEATTY’S EXPLANATION OF CENSORSHIP
EVENTS - Exact Details
QUOTES - Who said it?
100

All firemen were chosen to have this, reflecting society's emphasis on conformity

The same appearance / uniform look

100

Montag hides a book under this object at home

His pillow

100

Beatty says that books produce a certain feeling instead of happiness

Unhappiness / Confusion

100

Montag secretly takes a specific item from the old woman’s house

A book

100

”’The first time we ever met, where was it, and when?’”

Montag

200

These replace real human relationships in Mildred's life

Her TV walls / TV “family”

200

Montag begins to question his job after hearing that a man was sent to this place for keeping books

A mental hospital / Asylum
200

According to Beatty, a certain technology reduced interest in reading

Television / Radio / Seashells

200

The old woman does this to ensure her death during the fire

She lights the fire herself with a match

200

”’Didn’t firemen prevent fires rather than stoke them up and get them going?’”

Clarisse McClellan

300

The smell that becomes unbearable to Montag

Kerosene

300

Montag begins questioning this aspect of his life after the house fire

His role as a fireman / his happiness / his job

300

Beatty says that books require something that most people dislike

Thinking / Effort

300

Montag feels this physical reaction after the old woman dies in the fire

Sickness / Nausea

300

”’Any man’s insane who thinks he can fool the Government and us’”

Captain Beatty

451

Beatty repeats onomatopoeias and rapid, short words like "'Click, Pic, Look, Eye, Now'" to emphasize this about society

The extreme speed, superficiality, and mechanical nature of their modern, technological society

451

Montag’s conflict with Mildred shows that their marriage lacks this

Real emotional connection

451

Beatty explains that pressure to censor books came from a specific group

Minority groups

451

At the end of the section, Montag begins reading this book, showing his first real step toward independent thought

Gulliver’s Travels

451

”’Where's your common sense? None of those books agree with each other’”

Captain Beatty

500

This animal is used in a simile to describe a burning book

A white pigeon
500

Montag and Mildred sleep in this arrangement, showing emotional and physical distance between them

Separate beds

500

Beatty describes the first fireman in history as this famous historical figure

Benjamin Franklin

500

After returning home from the old woman’s house, Montag observes Mildred talking at him in this way, and compares her speech to this, highlighting its shallow, repetitive nature

A two-year-old child building word patterns

500

“‘…war may be declared any hour. This country stands ready to defend its—’”

The radio