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Don't let it go!—while he was seeing the smoke rising proudly from factory |
chimneys, while he was struggling to cut through the smoke and reach the |
vision at the root of these visions. |
He was pulling at coils of wire, he was linking them and tearing them |
apart—while the sudden sense of sunrays and pine trees kept pulling at the |
corners of his mind. Dagny!—he heard himself crying soundlessly— |
Dagny, in the name of the best within us! . . . He was jerking at futile |
levers and at a throttle that had nothing to move. . . . Dagny!—he was crying |
to a twelve-year-old girl in a sunlit clearing of the woods— |
in the name of the best within us, I must now start this train! . . . |
Dagny, that is what it was . . . and you knew it, then, but I didn't . . . |
you knew it when you turned to look at the rails. . . . I said, "not business |
or earning a living" . . . but, Dagny, business and earning a living and that |
in man which makes it possible—that is the best within us, that was the thing |
to defend . . . in the name of saving it, Dagny, I must now start this train. |
. . . |
When he found that he had collapsed on the floor of the cab and knew that |
there was nothing he could do here any longer, he rose and he climbed down |
the ladder, thinking dimly of the engine's wheels, even though he knew that |
the engineer had checked them. He felt the crunch of the desert dust under |
his feet when he let himself drop to the ground. He stood still and, in the |
enormous silence, he heard the rustle of tumbleweeds stirring in the |
darkness, like the chuckle of an invisible army made free to move when the |
Comet was not. He heard a sharper rustle close by—and he saw the small gray |
shape of a rabbit rise on its haunches to sniff at the steps of a car of the |
Taggart Comet. With a jolt of murderous fury, he lunged in the direction of |
the rabbit, as if he could defeat the advance of the enemy in the person of |
that tiny gray form. The rabbit darted off into the darkness—but he knew that |
the advance was not to be defeated. |
He stepped to the front of the engine and looked up at the letters TT. |
Then he collapsed across the rail and lay sobbing at the foot of the engine, |
with the beam of a motionless headlight above him going off into a limitless |
night. |
The music of Richard Halley's Fifth Concerto streamed from his keyboard, |
past the glass of the window, and spread through the air, over the lights of |
the valley. It was a symphony of triumph. The notes flowed up, they spoke of |
rising and they were the rising itself, they were the essence and the form of |
upward motion, they seemed to embody every human act and thought that had |
ascent as its motive. It was a sunburst of sound, breaking out of hiding and |
spreading open. It had the freedom of release and the tension of purpose. It |
swept space clean and left nothing but the joy of an unobstructed effort. |
Only a faint echo within the sounds spoke of that from which the music had |
escaped, but spoke in laughing astonishment at the discovery that there was |
no ugliness or pain, and there never had had to be. It was the song of an |
immense deliverance. |
The lights of the valley fell in glowing patches on the snow still |
covering the ground. There were shelves of snow on the granite ledges and on |
the heavy limbs of the pines. But the naked branches of the birch trees had a |
faintly upward thrust, as if in confident promise of the coming leaves of |
spring. |
The rectangle of light on the side of a mountain was the window of |
Mulligan's study. Midas Mulligan sat at his desk, with a map and a column of |
figures before him. He was listing the assets of his bank and working on a |
plan of projected investments. He was noting down the locations he was |
choosing: "New York—Cleveland—Chicago . . . New York—Philadelphia . . . New |
York . . . New York . . . New York . . ." |
The rectangle of light at the bottom of the valley was the window of |
Danneskjold's home. Kay Ludlow sat before a mirror, thoughtfully studying the |
shades of film make-up, spread open in a battered case. |
Ragnar Danneskjold lay stretched on a couch, reading a volume of the works |
of Aristotle: ". . . for these truths hold good for everything that is, and |
not for some special genus apart from others. And all men use them, because |
they are true of being qua being. . . . For a principle which every one must |
have who understands anything that is, is not a hypothesis. . . . Evidently |
then such a principle is the most certain of all; which principle this is, |
let us proceed to say. It is, that the same attribute cannot at the same time |
belong and not belong to the same subject in the same respect. . ." |
The rectangle of light in the acres of a farm was the window of the |
library of Judge Narragansett. He sat at a table, and the light of his lamp |
fell on the copy of an ancient document. He had marked and crossed out the |
contradictions in its statements that had once been the cause of its |
destruction. He was now adding a new clause to its pages: "Congress shall |
make no law abridging the freedom of production and trade . . ." |
The rectangle of light in the midst of a forest was the window of the |
cabin of Francisco d'Anconia. Francisco lay stretched on the floor, by the |
dancing tongues of a fire, bent over sheets of paper, completing the drawing |
of his smelter. Hank Rearden and Ellis Wyatt sat by the fireplace. "John will |
design the new locomotives," Rearden was saying, "and Dagny will run the |
first railroad between New York and Philadelphia. She—" And, suddenly, on |
hearing the next sentence, Francisco threw his head up and burst out |
laughing, a laughter of greeting, triumph and release. They could not hear |
the music of Halley's Fifth Concerto now flowing somewhere high above the |
roof, but Francisco's laughter matched its sounds. Contained in the sentence |
he had heard, Francisco was seeing the sunlight of spring on the open lawns |
of homes across the country, he was seeing the sparkle of motors, he was |
seeing the glow of the steel in the rising frames of new skyscrapers, he was |
seeing the eyes of youth looking at the future with no uncertainty or fear. |
The sentence Rearden had uttered was: "She will probably try to take the |
shirt off my back with the freight rates she's going to charge, but— I’ll be |
able to meet them." |
The faint glitter of light weaving slowly through space, on the highest |
accessible ledge of a mountain, was the starlight on the strands of Galt's |
hair. He stood looking, not at the valley below, but at the darkness of the |
world beyond its walls. Dagny's hand rested on his shoulder, and the wind |
blew her hair to blend with his. She knew why he had wanted to walk through |
the mountains tonight and what he had stopped to consider. She knew what |
words were his to speak and that she would be first to hear them. |
They could not see the world beyond the mountains, there was only a void |
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