You can find this stuff in the part of the book where Montag goes over to Faber's house for the first time.
What Montag does that horrifies Faber is to start ripping up the Bible. Faber is horrified because that is, as far as he knows, the only copy of The Bible around and he doesn't want it destroyed.
The last refuge for a dangerous intellectual is the Stock Market. That is how Faber has gotten himself some money even though he has no job. He has played the stock market and gotten enough money to use to invent the "bullet" that he gives Montag.
Montag reads poetry aloud over the radio, which shocks and horrifies Faber because it challenges the oppressive society they live in and puts both of their lives at risk.
Beatty pretty much knows everything. He was going to find out about Faber, he knew about Montag's books and all of that whole thing. If Beatty hadn't been murdered he would have arrested Montag, found Faber, and stopped the entire operation.
In the book "Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury, Faber reads from the Book of Ecclesiastes in the Bible to Montag. Specifically, he reads Ecclesiastes 3:1-8, which talks about the different seasons of life.
Montag went to see Faber to seek guidance and advice on how to understand and interpret the books he has been reading, as well as to find a way to help overthrow the oppressive dystopian society they live in. Faber offers support and knowledge that Montag lacks in his quest for freedom and truth.
Montag thought that it might be werid because books wasnt important to them it was their jod.
Faber had designed a small two-way communication device in the form of a seashell radio earpiece. This device allowed him to be in constant contact with Montag, providing him with guidance and assistance in his quest for knowledge and resistance against the oppressive society.
That's easy, he eats Odysseus' men and they barely escape the island with their lives.
A pair of balls
That anyone still thinks there is anything shocking about this or any other spiritual path.
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.
Kissed Maya
Edge spearing someone into a table that was on fire
ma rainey's black bottom is about this stupid thing that happened over that really other stupid thing. the whole play revolves around this one woman that does absolutely nothing. the shocking end is not at all shocking.