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Quotes from Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
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 Current Search - where in Fahrenheit 451
1  Yes, and look where we're headed.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 2: The Sieve and the Sand
2  "You know where they are or you wouldn't be here," she said.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
3  I just want to figure out who they are and what they want and where they're going.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
4  He searched the house and found the books where Mildred had stacked them behind the refrigerator.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 2: The Sieve and the Sand
5  Books were only one type of receptacle where we stored a lot of things we were afraid we might forget.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 2: The Sieve and the Sand
6  It was suddenly more important than any other thing in a lifetime that he know where he had met Mildred.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
7  On the front porch where she had come to weigh them quietly with her eyes, her quietness a condemnation, the woman stood motionless.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
8  They and their charcoal hair and soot-colored brows and bluish-ash-smeared cheeks where they had shaven close; but their heritage showed.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
9  Complete darkness, not a hint of the silver world outside, the windows tightly shut, the chamber a tomb-world where no sound from the great city could penetrate.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
10  "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 Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
11  Faber opened the bedroom door and led Montag into a small chamber where stood a table upon which a number of metal tools lay among a welter of microscopic wire hairs, tiny coils, bobbins and crystals.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 2: The Sieve and the Sand
12  It was like a great bee come home from some field where the honey is full of poison wildness, of insanity and nightmare, its body crammed with that over-rich nectar and now it was sleeping the evil out of itself.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
13  The converter attachment, which had cost them one hundred dollars, automatically supplied her name whenever the announcer addressed his anonymous audience, leaving a blank where the proper syllables could be filled in.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
14  Perhaps his nose detected a faint perfume, perhaps the skin on the backs of his hands, on his face, felt the temperature rise at this one spot where a person's standing might raise the immediate atmosphere ten degrees for an instant.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
15  Montag did not look back at his wife as he went trembling along the hall to the kitchen, where he stood a long time watching the rain hit the windows before he came back down the hall in the gray light, waiting for the tremble to subside.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 2: The Sieve and the Sand
16  For these were the hands that had acted on their own, no part of him, here was where the conscience first manifested itself to snatch books, dart off with Job and Ruth and Willie Shakespeare, and now, in the firehouse, these hands seemed gloved with blood.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 2: The Sieve and the Sand
17  He walked out of the fire station and along the midnight street toward the subway where the silent air-propelled train slid soundlessly down its lubricated flue in the earth and let him out with a great puff of warm air onto the cream-tiled escalator rising to the suburb.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
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