Guy Montag escapes the city by running (More of a jog because he was partly injected with morphine earlier when the Mechanical Hound attacked him but failed), is nearly run over by a car full of children, and runs into the outskirts of the city. He is nearly caught as the police call for the entire neighboorhood he's running through to "Look out their windows, open their doors, ..." He barely makes it by half a second into a river bank where he can't be seen and floats down that river. (The River kind of represents a change in Montag, unreality of technology and F451, to the reality of the real world), and he ends up at the rusty old railroad tracks Faber was talking about. He continues along the tracks (All the while experiencing the outside world and leisure time, which Faber mentions) and comes across a group of knowledgeables (What Faber was ALSO talking about, how a bunch of hobos lived along the tracks, college professers etc.), and one important one named Granger, who represents Ray Bradbury in some sort of way, by directly showing his ideas.
Happy now? Just helped you with a last minute report/forgot to read and need to know what happened. Or I'm mistaken.
montag burns beatty with the flame thrower and kills him and the others!!
Montag headed for the river.
Captain Beatty drove the Salamander to Montag's house in "Fahrenheit 451." Beatty was aware that Montag had secretly been collecting and hiding books, and he wanted to confront Montag about his subversive actions.
In the book "Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury, it is Captain Beatty who instructs Montag to burn his own house down. Beatty gives Montag an ultimatum, forcing him to make a choice between burning his home or facing the consequences.
because they found books in Montag's house.
Im pretty sure to Faber's house, then to the railroad where he meets Granger.
In Ray Bradbury's novel "Fahrenheit 451," the Mechanical Hound led by Captain Beatty and some other firemen, including one named Stoneman, are responsible for torching Montag's house. Beatty confronts Montag and ultimately orders the house to be burned down.
Mildred reports Montag to the authorities and turns him in, leading to the destruction of the books and their implications.
Captain Beatty did this to Montag in order to get Montag back into the spirit of being a fireman so that Montag would believe the things that he used to believe as a fireman like how books are not important and should be burned because it is fun to burn things. Beatty also forced Montag as a punishment for hiding books.
Mildred, Montag's wife, was the informant on montag's home.
Captain Beatty basically tells Montag to stop being curious and get back to doing his job. Beatty says that every fireman is curious at one time or another but that Montag shouldn't throw his life away to be satisfied.
Beatty has Montag use flamethrowers instead of kerosene on his own house, a more intense and destructive method of burning. This reflects Beatty's desire to incite Montag's anger and disillusionment by making him fully participate in the destruction.