Montag relates book-reading to the international problems he wonders about by realizing that books contain important information that can help him understand complex issues and see the world from different perspectives. By reading books, he gains knowledge and critical thinking skills that enable him to make connections between what he reads and the global challenges he contemplates. This prompts him to question the status quo and seek answers to the problems that concern him on a larger scale.
Beatty's allusion in his first statement to Montag in "Fahrenheit 451" is to a quote by the playwright William Shakespeare: "But all’s too weak; For brave Macbeth—well he deserves that name— Disdaining fortune, with his brandish'd steel, Which smoked with bloody execution, Like valor's minion carved out his passage." Beatty uses this allusion to compare Montag to Macbeth, implying that Montag, like Macbeth, is brave and capable of great deeds, but also suggesting that he may be on a dangerous path.
Mildred, Montag's wife, turned in the alarm against Montag for having books.
Montag = Monday
No, Heidi Montag is not single.
Montag is shocked and disturbed by the elderly lady's actions. He is visibly shaken as he witnesses her determination to die with her books and her refusal to live in a world without literature. This event marks a turning point for Montag, sparking his curiosity about books and ultimately leading him to question the society he lives in.
montag burns beatty with the flame thrower and kills him and the others!!
Warren Montag was born in 1952.
Jerzy Montag was born in 1947.
Dieter Montag is 180 cm.
Montag realized that Beatty wanted to die and provoked Montag to kill him. He knew this when Beatty goaded him and knew all the details about the hidden earpiece that Faber had given Montag.
during the manhunt for Montag by the hound, the camera identifies an innocent man as Montag because the hound had lost Montag. (Montag's disguise worked) In order to please the people watching the manhunt on television they killed a man but didn't get close enough to him with the camera for anybody to realize that it wasn't Montag.
Yes, Faber objected to Montag reading poetry because he believed that it wasn't enough to solve the problems in their society. Faber thought that action was needed to incite meaningful change rather than just reading and discussing literature.