TREES in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
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 Current Search - trees in Fahrenheit 451
1  Suddenly the trees might blow under a great wind of helicopters.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 3: Burning Bright
2  The trees overhead made a great sound of letting down their dry rain.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
3  In the trees, the birds that had flown away quickly now came back and settled down.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 3: Burning Bright
4  He lay in the high barn loft all night, listening to distant animals and insects and trees, the little motions and stirrings.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 3: Burning Bright
5  The concussion knocked the air across and down the river, turned the men over like dominoes in a line, blew the water in lifting sprays, and blew the dust and made the trees above them mourn with a great wind passing away south.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 3: Burning Bright
6  The lawn was empty, the trees empty, the street empty, and while at first he did not even know he missed her or was even looking for her, the fact was that by the time he reached the subway, there were vague stirrings of dis-ease in him.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 1: The Hearth and the Salamander
7  His name was Faber, and when he finally lost his fear of Montag, he talked in a cadenced voice, looking at the sky and the trees and the green park, and when an hour had passed he said something to Montag and Montag sensed it was a rhymeless poem.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 2: The Sieve and the Sand
8  He smelled the heavy musk like perfume mingled with blood and the gummed exhalation of the animal's breath, all cardamom and moss and ragweed odor in this huge night where the trees ran at him, pulled away, ran, pulled away, to the pulse of the heart behind his eyes.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 3: Burning Bright
9  And then the voices began and they were talking, and he could hear nothing of what the voices said, but the sound rose and fell quietly and the voices were turning the world over and looking at it; the voices knew the land and the trees and the city which lay down the track by the river.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 3: Burning Bright
10  There was a silence gathered all about that fire and the silence was in the men's faces, and time was there, time enough to sit by this rusting track under the trees, and look at the world and turn it over with the eyes, as if it were held to the center of the bonfire, a piece of steel these men were all shaping.
Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury
Context   In PART 3: Burning Bright