The novel's hero, Guy Montag, takes pride in his work with the fire division. A third-era fire fighter, Montag fits the cliché part, with his "dark hair, dark temples… red hot face, and… blue-steel shaved yet unshaved look." Montag rejoices in light of his work and serves as a model of twenty-fourth-century demonstrable skill. Stinking of ashes and fiery remains, he appreciates dressing in his uniform, assuming the part of an ensemble conductor as he coordinates the metal spout toward unlawful books, and noticing the lamp fuel that raises the temperature to the required 451 degrees Fahrenheit — the temperature at which book paper lights. In his initial eight years of business, Montag even participated in the fire fighters' inhuman …show more content…
Montag's sullenness achieves a basic point after he witnesses the blazing of an old lady, who enthusiastically grasps demise when the fire fighters come to smolder her books. His psychosomatic sickness, a noteworthy blend of chills and fever, neglects to trick his manager, who effortlessly recognizes the reason for Montag's discomfort — a hazardously extended sensibility in a world that prizes a dulled awareness. Attracted by books, Montag powers Mildred to go along with him in perusing. His crave humanistic learning drives him to Professor Faber, the one taught individual that he can trust to show him. Taking after the blazing of the old lady, his organization's first human casualty, Montag faces a horrifying profound difficulty of adoration and abhor for his occupation. As a fire fighter, he is set apart by the phoenix image, yet humorously, he is hindered from rising like the legendary winged creature since he does not have the know-how to change scholarly development into deeds. After he contacts Faber, in any case, Montag starts a transformation that means his resurrection as the phoenix of another era. A duality advances, the mix …show more content…
Beatty, who once in a while drives, takes the haggle the fire truck toward the following target — Montag's home. At the point when Beatty gets ready to capture him, Montag understands that he can't contain his hating for a perverted, idealist society. Quickly examining the results of his demonstration, he touches off Beatty and watches him smolder. As Montag races far from the startling scene, he immediately endures an influx of regret yet rapidly presumes that Beatty moved him into the slaughtering. Clever and gutsy, Montag outmaneuvers the Mechanical Hound, however debilitated by a desensitized leg, he is almost keep running over by an auto loaded with deadly high school joyriders. With Faber's help, he grasps his maturing optimism and trusts in getting away to a superior life, one in which difference and exchange recover mankind from its miserable dim age. Purified through water to another life by his dive into the stream and wearing Faber's garments,