06 August 2009, 12:43 PM
pdiabloFahrenheit question
I'm teaching Fahrenheit 451 and looking for anyone who knows why Mr. Bradbury chose Alexander Smith's quote from Dreamthorp ("Time has fallen asleep in the afternoon sunshine") as the first quote Montag is exposed to. All I'm finding online are people making the allusion, but no one is speculating on why he chose that particular piece. Ideas?
06 August 2009, 03:34 PM
jktquote:
Originally posted by pdiablo:
I'm teaching Fahrenheit 451 and looking for anyone who knows why Mr. Bradbury chose Alexander Smith's quote from Dreamthorp ("Time has fallen asleep in the afternoon sunshine") as the first quote Montag is exposed to. All I'm finding online are people making the allusion, but no one is speculating on why he chose that particular piece. Ideas?
I've faxed your question to Ray and will hopefully have an answer for you by Saturday.
09 August 2009, 08:49 AM
jktquote:
Originally posted by pdiablo:
I'm teaching Fahrenheit 451 and looking for anyone who knows why Mr. Bradbury chose Alexander Smith's quote from Dreamthorp ("Time has fallen asleep in the afternoon sunshine") as the first quote Montag is exposed to. All I'm finding online are people making the allusion, but no one is speculating on why he chose that particular piece. Ideas?
pdiablo: Are you ready for the answer? Drum roll please...
Ray said, "It just came to me. I do not remember why, stories just write themselves."
There you have it, a blinding stroke of genius, nothing more...nothing less.
04 February 2010, 12:56 PM
pdiabloThank you for the response. As a writer, myself, I understand. I was just curious if there was anything else. I have my students pick one of the many quotes from the book and write about it in regards to one of our discussion topics (censorship, perfect civilization, etc...) and I've found many of them find that quote to be their favorite.