The Fountainhead

The Fountainhead

by

Ayn Rand

Johnny Stokes Character Analysis

Johnny Stokes is a poor but intelligent, good-looking boy whom Ellsworth Toohey sprays with a hose when they are both young boys. Toohey dislikes the fact that Stokes doesn’t need to work as hard as Toohey does on his school lessons, and that he is physically stronger. Toohey mocks Stokes’s poverty to shame him.
Get the entire The Fountainhead LitChart as a printable PDF.
The Fountainhead PDF

Johnny Stokes Character Timeline in The Fountainhead

The timeline below shows where the character Johnny Stokes appears in The Fountainhead. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Part 2: Chapter 9
Individualism Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon
When Ellsworth Toohey was seven years old, he turned a hose on Johnny Stokes and soaked his much-loved Sunday suit. Stokes was bright and good-looking while Toohey was frail.... (full context)
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon
...math. However, he had to work hard on his lessons and he did work hard—unlike Johnny Stokes , to whom learning came “automatically.” Toohey didn’t take part in athletics, which he said... (full context)