1 The men walked clumsily to the door.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 2 The doorknobs turned on five thousand doors.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 3: Burning Bright 3 He felt the city turn to its thousands of doors.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 3: Burning Bright 4 Montag, I see you came in the back door this time.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 5 She said some crazy thing when we came in the door.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 6 He put his hand into the glove hole of his front door and let it know his touch.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 7 Lights flicked on and house doors opened all down the street, to watch the carnival set up.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 3: Burning Bright 8 Montag got up quickly, his heart pumping, and ran down the hall and stopped at the kitchen door.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 9 They crashed the front door and grabbed at a woman, though she was not running; she was not trying to escape.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 10 He stood outside the talking house in the shadows, thinking he might even tap on their door and whisper, "Let me come in."
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 11 Captain Beatty, keeping his dignity, backed slowly through the front door, his pink face burnt and shiny from a thousand fires and night excitements.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 12 Next thing they were up in musty blackness swinging silver hatchets at doors that were, after all, unlocked, tumbling through like boys all rollick and shout.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 13 He wore his happiness like a mask and the girl had run off across the lawn with the mask and there was no way of going to knock on her door and ask for it back.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 14 "Go on," said the woman, and Montag felt himself back away and away out the door, after Beatty, down the steps, across the lawn, where the path of kerosene lay like the track of some evil snail.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 15 And the men with the cigarettes in their straight-lined mouths, the men with the eyes of puff adders, took up their load of machine and tube, their case of liquid melancholy and the slow dark sludge of nameless stuff, and strolled out the door.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 16 He was in someone else's house, like those other jokes people told of the gentleman, drunk, coming home late late at night, unlocking the wrong door, entering a wrong room, and bedding with a stranger and getting up early and going to work and neither of them the wiser.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray BradburyContext In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander 17 Once he saw her shaking a walnut tree, once he saw her sitting on the lawn knitting a blue sweater, three or four times he found a bouquet of late flowers on his porch, or a handful of chestnuts in a little sack, or some autumn leaves neatly pinned to a sheet of white paper and thumbtacked to his door.
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