text
stringlengths 0
169
|
|---|
THE FOUNTAINHEAD by Ayn Rand
|
To Frank O’Connor
|
Copyright (c) 1943 The Bobbs-Merrill Company
|
Copyright (c) renewed 1971 by Ayn Rand.
|
All rights reserved. For information address The Bobbs-Merrill Company, a
|
division of Macmillan, Inc., 866 Third Avenue, New York, New York 10022.
|
Introduction to the Twenty-fifth Anniversary Edition
|
Many people have asked me how I feel about the fact that The Fountainhead has
|
been in print for twenty-five years. I cannot say that I feel anything in
|
particular, except a kind of quiet satisfaction. In this respect, my attitude
|
toward my writing is best expressed by a statement of Victor Hugo: "If a writer
|
wrote merely for his time, I would have to break my pen and throw it away."
|
Certain writers, of whom I am one, do not live, think or write on the range of
|
the moment. Novels, in the proper sense of the word, are not written to vanish
|
in a month or a year. That most of them do, today, that they are written and
|
published as if they were magazines, to fade as rapidly, is one of the sorriest
|
aspects of today’s literature, and one of the clearest indictments of its
|
dominant esthetic philosophy: concrete-bound, journalistic Naturalism which has
|
now reached its dead end in the inarticulate sounds of panic.
|
Longevity-predominantly, though not exclusively-is the prerogative of a literary
|
school which is virtually non-existent today: Romanticism. This is not the place
|
for a dissertation on the nature of Romantic fiction, so let me state--for the
|
record and for the benefit of those college students who have never been allowed
|
to discover it--only that Romanticism is the conceptual school of art. It deals,
|
not with the random trivia of the day, but with the timeless, fundamental,
|
universal problems and values of human existence. It does not record or
|
photograph; it creates and projects. It is concerned--in the words of
|
Aristotle--not with things as they are, but with things as they might be and
|
ought to be.
|
And for the benefit of those who consider relevance to one’s own time as of
|
crucial importance, I will add, in regard to our age, that never has there been
|
a time when men have so desperately needed a projection of things as they ought
|
to be.
|
I do not mean to imply that I knew, when I wrote it, that The Fountainhead would
|
remain in print for twenty-five years. I did not think of any specific time
|
period. I knew only that it was a book that ought to live. It did.
|
But that I knew it over twenty-five years ago--that I knew it while The
|
1
|
Fountainhead was being rejected by twelve publishers, some of whom declared that
|
it was "too intellectual,"
|
"too controversial" and would not sell because no audience existed for it--that
|
was the difficult part of its history; difficult for me to bear. I mention it
|
here for the sake of any other writer of my kind who might have to face the same
|
battle--as a reminder of the fact that it can be done.
|
It would be impossible for me to discuss The Fountainhead or any part of its
|
history without mentioning the man who made it possible for me to write it: my
|
husband, Frank O’Connor.
|
In a play I wrote in my early thirties, Ideal, the heroine, a screen star,
|
speaks for me when she says: "I want to see, real, living, and in the hours of
|
my own days, that glory I create as an illusion. I want it real. I want to know
|
that there is someone, somewhere, who wants it, too. Or else what is the use of
|
seeing it, and working, and burning oneself for an impossible vision? A spirit,
|
too, needs fuel. It can run dry."
|
Frank was the fuel. He gave me, in the hours of my own days, the reality of that
|
sense of life, which created The Fountainhead--and he helped me to maintain it
|
over a long span of years when there was nothing around us but a gray desert of
|
people and events that evoked nothing but contempt and revulsion. The essence of
|
the bond between us is the fact that neither of us has ever wanted or been
|
tempted to settle for anything less than the world presented in The
|
Fountainhead. We never will.
|
If there is in me any touch of the Naturalistic writer who records "real-life"
|
dialogue for use in a novel, it has been exercised only in regard to Frank. For
|
instance, one of the most effective lines in The Fountainhead comes at the end
|
of Part II, when, in reply to Toohey’s question: "Why don’t you tell me what you
|
think of me?" Roark answers: "But I don’t think of you." That line was Frank’s
|
answer to a different type of person, in a somewhat similar context. "You’re
|
casting pearls without getting even a pork chop in return," was said by Frank to
|
me, in regard to my professional position. I gave that line to Dominique at
|
Roark’s trial.
|
I did not feel discouragement very often, and when I did, it did not last longer
|
than overnight. But there was one evening, during the writing of The
|
Fountainhead, when I felt so profound an indignation at the state of "things as
|
they are" that it seemed as if I would never regain the energy to move one step
|
farther toward "things as they ought to be." Frank talked to me for hours, that
|
night. He convinced me of why one cannot give up the world to those one
|
despises. By the time he finished, my discouragement was gone; it never came
|
back in so intense a form.
|
I had been opposed to the practice of dedicating books; I had held that a book
|
is addressed to any reader who proves worthy of it. But, that night, I told
|
Frank that I would dedicate The Fountainhead to him because he had saved it. And
|
one of my happiest moments, about two years later, was given to me by the look
|
on his face when he came home, one day, and saw the page-proofs of the book,
|
headed by the page that stated in cold, clear, objective print: To Frank
|
O’Connor.
|
I have been asked whether I have changed in these past twenty-five years. No, I
|
am the same--only more so. Have my ideas changed? No, my fundamental
|
convictions, my view of life and of man, have never changed, from as far back as
|
I can remember, but my knowledge of their applications has grown, in scope and
|
in precision. What is my present evaluation of The Fountainhead? I am as proud
|
2
|
of it as I was on the day when I finished writing it.
|
Was The Fountainhead written for the purpose of presenting my philosophy? Here,
|
I shall quote from The Goal of My Writing, an address I gave at Lewis and Clark
|
College, on October 1, 1963: "This is the motive and purpose of my writing; the
|
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.