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What is the hound in 451?

By Sarah Rowe

In Fahrenheit 451, mechanical hounds made of metal are used by the fire station to track down suspects who might have banned books. They use their advanced sense of smell and attack suspects by injecting them with a large needle filled with anesthetics.

What is the hound in 451?

The Hound represents government control and manipulation of technology. Originally, dogs served as the rescuers for firemen. They were given the job of sniffing out the injured or weak. However, in this dystopia, the Hound has been made into a watchdog of society.

What is the medical hound and what is its purpose in Fahrenheit 451?

The mechanical hound is a robot dog. It’s purpose is to hunt down and kill. It has a steel needle that injects morphine. It is programmable.

What does the Hound do to Montag?

The Mechanical Hound appears and injects Montag’s leg with anesthetic before he manages to destroy it with his flamethrower.

Is the hound in Fahrenheit 451 a robot?

In Ray Bradbury’s novel, Fahrenheit 451, the Mechanical Hound is an eight-legged robotic “dog” used to track down fugitives like the protagonist Montag.

How does Bradbury describe the hound?

Bradbury gives a frightening description of his imagined beast when it is first mentioned in Fahrenheit 451: “The mechanical Hound slept but did not sleep, lived but did not live in its gently humming, gently vibrating, softly illuminated kennel back in a dark corner of the fire house.

Why is the salamander in Fahrenheit 451?

The salamander represents immortality, rebirth, passion, and the ability to withstand flames. As a symbol of the firemen and the name of their trucks, the salamander symbol also reminds the reader that fire is the foundation of this dystopian world and that firemen represent power, protection, and immortality.

Why did Beatty send the hound to Montag’s house?

Beatty sent the Mechanical Hound to Montag’s house as a hint that he was watching him. He thinks Mildred must have found them in the garden and put them back in the house.

What can the hound not do in Fahrenheit 451?

Technically, the Hound should not be able to exhibit aggression toward Montag, since it would have to be specifically programmed to do so. As Captain Beatty explains, “It’s only copper wire, storage batteries, and electricity,” and hence it cannot decide who or what it will target: “It just ‘functions.

What is Montag’s theory on why the hound reacted the way it did?

What is Montag’s theory on why the Hound reacted the way it did? It doesn’t like him. How many times before had the Hound reacted this way toward Montag? Twice.

What does the Hound foreshadow?

The Mechanical Hound growling at Montag foreshadows the pursuit of him by the Hounds later in the novel. His trouble with the Hound coupled with Bradbury’s depiction of it heightens the drama—the reader knows Montag is guilty of something, and could infer he possesses books (a fact that is later revealed).

Who created the mechanical Hound in Fahrenheit 451?

Mechanical Hound by Ray Bradbury from Fahrenheit 451. An eight-legged robotic “hound” with hypodermic poison fangs. Note: See also the Science Fiction in the News stories Bradbury’s Mechanical Hound and DARPA’s Big Dog and DARPA’s Big Dog Now In Puppy Stage.

Why is Montag worried about the Hound?

Why is Montag suspicious of the mechanical hound? Montag is suspicious because the hound has gone after him before and thinks that it is programmed to kill him.

What animal would Clarisse be?

Hummingbird. Clarisse is described as beautiful and different, something which I think describes the Hummingbird as well. She is also capable of herself and is optimistic, friendly, and light of her being, which is used to describe the Hummingbird as a spirit animal.

What quote in Fahrenheit 451 shows the hound is paradoxical?

“The mechanical hound slept but did not sleep, lived but did not live” (Bradbury, 21). Bradbury’s brilliant use of paradoxes is apparent through Mildred, Montag, and society.

Why is Granger’s statement Montag ironic?

Why is Granger’s statement to Montag (“Welcome back from the dead.”) ironic? It is ironic because they just saw someone innocent be killed in place for Montag. How do Granger and the others preserve books? Granger and the others preserve the books by remembering them with their photographic memory.

Why does Bradbury compare the hound to a bee?

The “stinger” of a honey bee is a close match to the morphine needle on the Hound. The comparison between the honey bee and the Hound gives perspective to the reader while also leaving room for imagination. The effect of this simile is that is gives a broader sense of what the Mechanical Hound is.

What’s a mechanical hound?

In the novel Fahrenheit 451, the Mechanical Hound is a robotic dog with eight legs used to track down and kill fugitives in Bradbury’s dystopian society. The Mechanical Hound lives in a kennel inside the fire station and eventually chases Montag as a fugitive towards the end of novel.