“I don’t know. We have everything we need to be happy, but we aren’t
happy. Something’s missing. I looked around. The only thing I positively
knew was gone was the books I’d burned in ten or twelve years. So I
thought books might help.”
“You’re a hopeless romantic,” said Faber. “It would be funny if it
were not serious. It’s not books you need, it’s some of the things that
once were in books. The same things could be in the `parlour families’
today. The same infinite detail and awareness could be projected through
the radios and televisors, but are not. No, no, it’s not books at all
you’re looking for! Take it where you can find it, in old phonograph
records, old motion pictures, and in old friends; look for it in nature
and look for it in yourself. Books were only one type of receptacle
where we stored a lot of things we were afraid we might forget. There is
nothing magical in them at all. The magic is only in what books say,
how they stitched the patches of the universe together into one garment
for us. Of course you couldn’t know this, of course you still can’t
understand what I mean when I say all this. You are intuitively right,
that’s what counts. Three things are missing.
“Number one: Do you know why books such as this are so important?
Because they have quality. And what does the word quality mean? To me it
means texture. This book has pores. It has features. This book can go
under the microscope. You’d find life under the glass, streaming pastin
infinite profusion. The more pores, the more truthfully recorded details
of life per square inch you can get on a sheet of paper, the more
`literary’ you are. That’s my definition, anyway. Telling detail. Fresh
detail. The good writers touch life often. The mediocre ones run a quick
hand over her. The bad ones rape her and leave her for the flies.
“So now do you see why books are hated and feared? They show the
pores in the face of life. The comfortable people want only wax moon
faces, poreless, hairless, expressionless. We are living in a time when
flowers are trying to live on flowers, instead of growing on good rain
and black loam. Even fireworks, for all their prettiness, come from the
chemistry of the earth. Yet somehow we think we can grow, feeding on
flowers and fireworks, without completing the cycle back to reality. Do
you know the legend of Hercules and Antaeus, the giant wrestler, whose
strength was incredible so long as he stood firmly on the earth. But
when he was held, rootless, in mid-air, by Hercules, he perished easily.
If there isn’t something in that legend for us today, in this city, in
our time, then I am completely insane. Well, there we have the first
thing I said we needed. Quality, texture of information.”
“And the second?”
“Leisure.”
“Oh, but we’ve plenty of off-hours.”
“Off-hours, yes. But time to think? If you’re not driving a hundred
miles an hour, at a clip where you can’t think of anything else but the
danger, then you’re playing some game or sitting in some room where you
can’t argue with the fourwall televisor. Why? The televisor is ‘real.’
It is immediate, it has dimension. It tells you what to think and blasts
it in. It must be, right. It seems so right. It rushes you on so
quickly to its own conclusions your mind hasn’t time to protest, ‘What
nonsense!'”
“Only the ‘family’ is ‘people.'”
“I beg your pardon?”
“My wife says books aren’t ‘real.'”
“Thank God for that. You can shut them, say, ‘Hold on a moment.’ You
play God to it. But who has ever torn himself from the claw that
encloses you when you drop a seed in a TV parlour? It grows you any
shape it wishes! It is an environment as real as the world. It becomes
and is the truth. Books can be beaten down with reason. But with all my
knowledge and scepticism, I have never been able to argue with a
one-hundred-piece symphony orchestra, full colour, three dimensions, and
I being in and part of those incredible parlours. As you see, my
parlour is nothing but four plaster walls. And here ” He held out two
small rubber plugs. “For my ears when I ride the subway-jets.”
“Denham’s Dentifrice; they toil not, neither do they spin,” said
Montag, eyes shut. “Where do we go from here? Would books help us?”
“Only if the third necessary thing could be given us. Number one, as I
said, quality of information. Number two: leisure to digest it. And
number three: the right to carry out actions based on what we learn from
the inter-action of the first two. And I hardly think a very old man
and a fireman turned sour could do much this late in the game…”
"Fahrenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury