Montag is asked to burn down his house to ashes.
because they found books in Montag's house.
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.
Montag is irritated by the woman's presence in the house where they are about to burn books because she refuses to leave and insists on staying with her books. Her defiance and willingness to be burned along with her books challenge Montag's beliefs and make him question the morality of their actions. Her actions and words cause Montag to feel a sense of guilt and conflict within himself.
After the Mechanical Hound stabs Montag in the leg with a needle containing anesthetic he destroys the Hound with the flamethrower he used to burn down his house.
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.
Beatty taunted Montag about his growing curiosity and defiance towards the rules. He provoked Montag to burn his own house by quoting books, knowing that Montag was hiding illegal books, resulting in Montag turning the flame-thrower on Beatty.
Montag is a fireman, and in Fahrenheit 451 firemen start fires instead of putting them out. The only reason the firemen burn the houses is if books are in them, because it is illegal to read books. Most houses dont catch on fire though, because most are made fireproof.
"burn em' to ashes, then burn the ashes"
Mildred, Montag's wife, was the informant on montag's home.
montag's boss that tells montag to burn his books
Yes, in Ray Bradbury's novel "Fahrenheit 451," the protagonist, Montag, kills Captain Beatty in self-defense after Beatty taunts him and tries to burn him with a flamethrower. This act symbolizes Montag's turning point in rejecting the oppressive society and embracing knowledge and critical thinking.
Montag has to burn down his house because Mildred and her friends reported to Beatty that he has books in his house. As a punishment, Beatty makes Montag burn down his own home with a flame thrower. After burning down his house, Montag felt relieved because he was getting rid of the burden of his past and the house he shared with Mildred, who seemed like a stranger to him.