The Fountainhead

The Fountainhead

by

Ayn Rand

The Fountainhead: Part 3: Chapter 2 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Keating and Dominique are spending a quiet evening together at home. Keating stares into the fire, thinking that he’d always “heard and read” that “looking dreamily into a fire” in one’s own home makes a person happy, and he wonders why he doesn’t feel happy. He thinks he could describe this scene to friends and they’d be envious of his contentment, but he doesn’t feel contented, even though he has superiority, fame and wealth—all the things he’d wanted.
Keating finds that all the things that the world told him would make him happy haven’t really brought him any joy. He is paying the price of not staying true to himself and seeking what he truly wanted, like marriage with Catherine.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Love and Selfishness Theme Icon
In the past year, Keating added Dominique to his “possessions.” He enjoys introducing her to strangers and “watch[ing] the stupid, uncontrolled look of envy in their eyes.” He tells himself their marriage is better than he’d expected, with Dominique turning out to be “the ideal wife” who “devote[s] herself completely to his interests.” Only their sex life leaves him unsatisfied, since she is indifferent to him and “he had never made her experience anything.”
Most of the time, Keating is pleased enough by other people’s envy of him to convince himself that he is happy. Still, he is painfully aware that Dominique doesn’t care for him.
Themes
Love and Selfishness Theme Icon
Dominique fills Keating with a feeling of dread he cannot quite understand. He tells her he might finally know why—it’s because she has never once said what she thinks or expressed a desire of any kind. He says she is “like a corpse” or like “a blank negation.” He asks her, “Where’s your I?” To this, Dominique asks where his “I” is, shocking him into the realization that he doesn’t have one, either. She tells him that he has never wanted her “to be real.” He has only wanted “a mirror.” Most people “want mirrors around them. To reflect them while they’re reflecting too. […] Reflections of reflections and echoes of echoes. […] No center and no purpose.”
Dominique’s question seems to startle Keating into realizing he has no self. He has no opinions or personality, but just repeats what other people say. He has no idea what he wants, and only desires the things he is supposed to—just like most people.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Love and Selfishness Theme Icon
Quotes
Keating kneels before Dominique and tells her that she and Roark always make him feel like they are giving him “a steep wall to climb” or a “command to rise.” He always hated Roark and desired Dominique, which is why he married her despite knowing she despised him. She tells him that she never wanted to take revenge on him, but that she married him for her own reasons. She apologizes for destroying him by killing his “pretense” of self-respect, and she says she doesn’t want him to suffer. Keating tells her he loves her.
Keating recognizes that Roark and Dominique are superior to him because they have high standards for themselves and stay true to them, but he admits that their way of being is too challenging for him.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Get the entire The Fountainhead LitChart as a printable PDF.
The Fountainhead PDF
Just then, Toohey calls and says he will be coming over, and Keating immediately switches to his usual performance mode. Toohey tells them that Dominique should meet Wynand to convince him to give Keating the Stoneridge project. Dominique says that she has heard that Wynand expects sex in return for favors, and Toohey doesn’t deny it. Toohey says he has arranged for her to see him, and Keating asks her to call Wynand first thing in the morning since it’s “the chance of a lifetime.” He says he won’t be stopped by “fool gossip” and that Dominique can take care of herself.
Toohey has in the past suggested that Dominique sell her body to get commissions for Keating, and this time he brings her an actual opportunity to do so. Keating suddenly abandons his previous show of sincerity to insist that Dominique do whatever she can to bring him the commission. At the same time, he refuses to admit that he wants Dominique to sleep with Wynand, if that is what it will take, instead stating that he is above listening to gossip—in other words, he will feign ignorance.
Themes
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
When Keating leaves the room, Toohey confesses that he is disappointed that marriage to Keating hasn’t destroyed Dominique like he hoped it would, which is why he is plotting to have her sleep with Wynand. Dominique says she suspects that this is “only a side issue” and asks him what he has against Wynand. Toohey laughs, saying Wynand is “too observant,” which annoys Toohey, so he thinks the time is right to have him meet Dominique to see what will be left of either of them afterward.
Toohey admits that he wants to bring Dominique and Wynand together in order to destroy them both. He hopes that their strong personalities will be too much for both of them.
Themes
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon