text
stringlengths 0
169
|
---|
of darkness and rock, but the darkness was hiding the ruins of a continent: |
the roofless homes, the rusting tractors, the lightless streets, the |
abandoned rail. But far in the distance, on the edge of the earth, a small |
flame was waving in the wind, the defiantly stubborn flame of Wyatt's Torch, |
twisting, being torn and regaining its hold, not to be uprooted or |
extinguished. It seemed to be calling and waiting for the words John Galt was |
now to pronounce. |
"The road is cleared," said Galt. "We are going back to the world." |
He raised his hand and over the desolate earth he traced in space the sign |
of the dollar. |
THE END |
ABOUT THE AUTHOR |
"My personal life," says Ayn Rand, "is a postscript to my novels; it |
consists of the sentence: 'And I mean it.' I have always lived by the |
philosophy I present in my books— and it has worked for me, as it works for |
my characters. The concretes differ, the abstractions are the same. |
"I decided to be a writer at the age of nine, and everything I have done |
was integrated to that purpose. I am an American by choice and conviction. I |
was born in Europe, but I came to America because this was the country based |
on my moral premises and the only country where one could be fully free to |
write. I came here alone, after graduating from a European college. I had a |
difficult struggle, earning my living at odd jobs, until I could make a |
financial success of my writing. No one helped me, nor did I think at any |
time that it was anyone's duty to help me. |
"In college, I had taken history as my major subject, and philosophy as my |
special interest; the first—in order to have a factual knowledge of men's |
past, for my future writing; the second—in order to achieve an objective |
definition of my values. I found that the first could be learned, but the |
second had to be done by me. |
"I have held the same philosophy I now hold, for as far back as I can |
remember. I have learned a great deal through the years and expanded my |
knowledge of details, of specific issues, of definitions, of applications—and |
I intend to continue expanding it—but I have never had to change any of my |
fundamentals. My philosophy, in essence, is the concept of man as a heroic |
being, with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with |
productive achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as his only |
absolute. |
"The only philosophical debt I can acknowledge is to Aristotle. I most |
emphatically disagree with a great many parts of his philosophy—but his |
definition of the laws of logic and of the means of human knowledge is so |
great an achievement that his errors are irrelevant by comparison. You will |
find my tribute to him in the titles of the three parts of ATLAS SHRUGGED. |
"My other acknowledgment is on the dedication page of this novel. I knew |
what values of character I wanted to find in a man. I met such a man—and we |
have been married for twenty-eight years. His name is Frank O'Connor. |
"To all the readers who discovered The Fountainhead and asked me many |
questions about the wider application of its ideas, I want to say that I am |
answering these questions in the present novel and that The Fountainhead was |
only an overture to ATLAS SHRUGGED. |
"I trust that no one will tell me that men such as I write about don't |
exist. That this book has been written—and published—is my proof that they |
do." |