Across
- 2. The current, attractive President who beat Hubert Hoag
- 4. This Mrs. cries after Montag reads two verses from "Dover Beach," about "no certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain"
- 7. Beatty claims "We're all" this type of animal that "has strayed at times"
- 11. Faber calls Montag this name after he verbally accosts Mildred's friends
- 14. Faber claims this group has terrible tyranny
- 18. What fatal thing is likely scratching at the door emitting "an exhalation of electric steam" [two words]
- 20. These military jets periodically cross the sky and suggest impending conflict
- 21. What Montag would like to purchase in order to make copies of books
- 24. Montag claims this skill is no longer present in society
- 26. Beatty claims books can be like this type of person in a war who goes against the main authority
- 29. Beatty's states that the case at the end of Part Two is meant to keep the world feeling this emotion
- 30. This "clown" is said to be on "tonight"
- 32. Mrs. Bowles calls Montag this name in response to his rhyming intrusion
- 33. The old man claims books smell like this spice
- 34. When Montag gets to work, the Hound is gone but this amphibian on wheels is "sleeping"
- 36. The Salamander pulls up to the house of this fireman
- 39. Montag likes the idea of doing this to books, like one would to a seed, at firemen's houses
- 40. The commercial "brand" that distracts Montag from comprehending his reading, and causes him to shout on the train
- 42. This dreary month's rain falls "the long afternoon" through Guy and Mildred's "studies"
- 44. The place where Beatty claims to have debated Montag about books
- 45. The person that Mildred fears will come burn down the house
- 46. Mildred tells Montag to give this to the dog "for" her
- 47. This type of "case" stops the card game at the Firehouse
- 48. Montag reminds the old man that he could do this to him (old man) as Montag tears out pages of the Bible
- 49. This man has turned into one of the "family," which makes the old man wonder if God would recognize his own son
Down
- 1. Faber claims Montag is this type of Romantic
- 3. Faber claims though people have "off-hours" they do not have this thinking necessity
- 5. The old man claims he is this type of person in the scheme of bravery
- 6. The book Montag leverages against the old man
- 8. Mildred claims that books "aren't" this but that her "family" is
- 9. The flower Montag repeats over and over again on the subway
- 10. Montag reads this romantic type of literature to the ladies at his house
- 12. The only "subject" that Mildred claims to understand
- 13. The file-wallet label Montag references to get the info of the old man from the park
- 15. Faber becomes this royal bug and Montag becomes the drone
- 16. The first "Book" that Faber reads to Montag
- 17. The intangible but tangible feeling Montag experiences as he sits on the subway
- 19. This has stopped as Montag leaves Mildred to await her friends for their parlor shows
- 22. The activity Montag forces Mildred to participate in
- 23. One of the three playwrights Faber says wrote plays that are "too aware of the world"
- 25. The color of the "bullet" Montag places in his ear
- 27. The old man in the park from a year earlier who has become obsolete in the world
- 28. Montag claims that his wife is doing this and that a friend of his has already succumb
- 31. The subject that the old man used to teach
- 35. What Montag goes to the robotic bank for
- 37. If the words Montag reads are sand, Montag is this hole-filled filtering device
- 38. The ranked number associated with "the right to carry out actions based on what we learn"
- 41. Books like the Bible are important because they have this type of standard when compared to other reading material
- 43. This Shakespearean play includes hands "gloved in blood" and a mind full of guilt
